courierguy wrote:Heck, everything about ski flying is humorous! I like the pizza thing... all I've come up with is asking sled heads I land near if they have a problem and need any help, that and not having any brakes pretty much keeps me amused.
After I got it in the air, I turned back and landed again. The big-ass Arctic Cat came cruising back with a new and more drunk driver this time, and she wondered why we landed again. My reply was because I knew we could get airborne now.


The only problem now was I couldn't let go of the tail, it wanted to leave without me. I thought of turning it back sideways and getting belayed to a tree, or putting some branches under one ski (I had over 100' of rope and a sharp axe), but that would have taken time and been too much work, so I came up with another idea. I turned the tailwheel/ski out of the detent, and with it sideways to the slope I stomped it down in the snow. That seemed to plant it well enough for me to work my way up to the cockpit, but every now and then it would creak and move just a fraction of an inch, so I knew I had to be careful getting in. Once I planted my ass on the door sill and lifted both feet, but before I swung them around to the rudder pedals and grabbed the stick, would be the tricky part, or not. Hesitating a few minutes, using the time to get a better feel for how well the plane was going to stand still (like mounting a skittish horse I guess) I finally went for it and as quick and smoothly as possible got behind the controls.
This was a transition construct, from the level slab outside my hangar to the general sloping ground below. Made out of a 28' long flatbed that I got cheap and widened out to 10', which seemed PLENTY wide at the time. Not so, the next couple years of ski ops showed it to be like threading a needle, especially in a cross wind. I need to hit this with a certain amount of speed, in order to make it all the way up. Too slow is not the way to do it, about 8 MPH is right. Now I should mention I had had a problem earlier with one side of the ramp melting off to the rusty steel, while the other side was 12" deep in snow. This was caused by a combination of wind drifting and sun effect. My solution to this unevenness was, at the time, brilliant. I bought some high density polyethylene, in 4' rolls, and with some big headed pop rivets secured it to the steel ramp. This stuff was slippery, period, snow or no snow. This worked for all of last year, but I noticed that the pop rivets were working loose, and I started to replace many of them, which got old quick.
After getting it up the final few feet, it was in the hangar, I was that damn close to being home free when all hell broke loose, some kind of lesson there I guess. The ski that got stopped so sudden, ended up with a tweaked attach bracket, enough so that I bagged it for the season as by the time I would have gotten it fixed properly, it would be over anyway. This summer the steep ramp will be recycled (4600 lbs so a good chunk of change at the scrap yard) and an earth ramp will be compacted and seeded. It won’t melt off like the elevated steel one, by the time it does all the snow will be gone anyways, plus it will be twice as wide. I can even spray it down and compact the snow to really make it last, NOW I thought of all this. 
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