Leaving his place I spotted a kite skier, and since I had always wanted to check out one of these large traction kites I landed and got to know Paul from New Jersey, who sells dairy equipment, who's just moved to Bozeman. After complimenting each other on how we were enjoying the great day I took off again (he sailed off first, something issue he had about my prop blast made him want to exit the area first), I headed towards the airstrip at Henry's Lake, but knowing the pretty brisk wind was direct cross, and ski cross winds are something to be approached with caution. In making my approach I got all into making sure I would be able to maintain directional authority without ending up in the fence line, while doing this I gradually realized that the snow had, as I feared with the higher temps, turned rotten. When bs'ing with the kite skier just a short while earlier, I had noticed about every fourth step my foot would sink into the snow to the ground, the snow was losing whatever structural integrity it had.
At Henry's, while still going about 15 mph I could feel the grabbiness and decided to abort the landing. 700' later, still going 15 mph, I realized I was running out of runway, so I made a 180, slowing down, (at near full throttle mind you, it was like taxiing in glue) to even slower, but once back in my track and even then after a run of over a thousand feet finally got the speed needed for lift off. Screw this, it was time to get the hell out here, and I bagged my plan to drop into nearby West Yellowstone and within in an hour I was flying over brown fields with no trace of snow, with the cabin heat OFF and the airvents open, wearing just a T-shirt! Hell, I was even getting thirsty.
To further illustrate the change of seasons, upon arriving at my strip I noticed a neighbor below my property had managed to start the first out of control brush fire of the year, time to take the skis off


Bad pictures.....due apparently to a low battery?