Backcountry Pilot • What's the Job Scene like in AK?

What's the Job Scene like in AK?

A general forum for anything related to flying the backcountry. Please check first if your new topic fits better into a more specific forum before posting.
41 postsPage 2 of 31, 2, 3

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

four emergency landings at one company? two dead engines? You might want to rethink your loyalty to a company with that kind of maintenance record.
Headoutdaplane offline
User avatar
Posts: 526
Joined: Thu May 29, 2008 5:21 pm
Location: Homer, AK
The winner is the person with the most stories when he dies, not the most gold.
www.belugaair.com

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

I consider them bad luck more than I do poor maintenance. The first one was a cowling fire on a 172, the rivets that hold the nose bowl broke causing the nose bowl to rub against the spinner backing plate. Made tons of smoke, landed at an airport and got it fixed. Second was a buzzard that ran into my wing, collapsing the leading edge back to the spar. Third was a flat cam which caused the crankcase to pressure up which caused the vacuum pump seal to blow out and caused the all the oil to pump out. I caught the oil pressure drop and killed the engine before it seized up, and glided to an airport. Fourth was recently I had the stainless prop governor line crack which caused oil to cover my windshield. I found a hay field that was about 1000ft, cut the engine and slipped it in. Stopped about 75ft from a barbed wire fence, replaced stainless line with rubber hose and flew it out next day. For the past 2 years that I've been flying for this company, no other pilots that fly for us have had any emergencys just me haha.
N300RE offline
User avatar
Posts: 136
Joined: Tue Nov 27, 2012 7:20 pm
Location: Wasilla
Aircraft: C-185,PA-30, PA-24, PA-28

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

N300RE wrote:I consider them bad luck more than I do poor maintenance. The first one was a cowling fire on a 172, the rivets that hold the nose bowl broke causing the nose bowl to rub against the spinner backing plate. Made tons of smoke, landed at an airport and got it fixed. Second was a buzzard that ran into my wing, collapsing the leading edge back to the spar. Third was a flat cam which caused the crankcase to pressure up which caused the vacuum pump seal to blow out and caused the all the oil to pump out. I caught the oil pressure drop and killed the engine before it seized up, and glided to an airport. Fourth was recently I had the stainless prop governor line crack which caused oil to cover my windshield. I found a hay field that was about 1000ft, cut the engine and slipped it in. Stopped about 75ft from a barbed wire fence, replaced stainless line with rubber hose and flew it out next day. For the past 2 years that I've been flying for this company, no other pilots that fly for us have had any emergencys just me haha.


The buzzard sounds like bad luck on the part of the company AND you. The other stuff all sounds like poor maintenance. I don't think I'd figure I owed those folks anything, and in fact, they owe YOU for not breaking an airplane due to these failures.

FWIW.

MTV
mtv offline
Knowledge Base Author
User avatar
Posts: 10514
Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2006 1:47 am
Location: Bozeman

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Dean Andrews Owner Andrews Air here in Kodiak. 907-487-2566. Might need pilot for this upcoming season.
Island Air. Kodiak. 907-487-4596. I know they were looking for an AP.

Hope it helps.
Alaskan47 offline
User avatar
Posts: 4
Joined: Fri Dec 30, 2011 1:55 am
Location: Kodiak Alaska

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

When I went to Nome... friends thought I was nuts. When I lived in Klawock...no one had heard of it.
When I was in Chignik... it was pretty lonely.
BUT... I met fascinating people at every stop. I learned what it was to be the minority member in the village.... a big surprise for a regular white guy.
Would never give back what I experienced all over Alaska. If that does not suit your personality, stick to the lower 48. And by the way.... no one I ever met got a job by writing to them. You had to be standing there... ready to go to work in the morning. That's just Alaska.
flightlogic offline
User avatar
Posts: 616
Joined: Wed Dec 24, 2008 2:51 pm
Location: Prescott
Flying is dangerous. If you think otherwise, you are new at this sport. Mind the gravity not the gap.

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

I've recently heard from my sources that pipeline through put is declining 7.9% per year at this point. Do the arithmetic yerself on that one. According to the original contract the next step is to rip the big tube and it's support facilities out and return everything to it's original state before the oil patch was developed. We'll see. The oil companies would likely try to keep it open for future oil discovery or convert it to natural gas transport. That would be my first choice too.

In any case when the oil runs out there will be an incredible amount of work coming and it will last at least a normal persons working lifetime. I'm sure there will be lots of Helo work and a fair amount of fixed wing too.

I'd sure like to take a quick five year stint up there again. I could money up pretty heavy pretty quick that way.

EB
Mister701 offline
User avatar
Posts: 2134
Joined: Thu Dec 05, 2013 11:13 pm
Location: Sparks
Aircraft: Rans S7LS

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Emory Bored wrote:I've recently heard from my sources that pipeline through put is declining 7.9% per year at this point. Do the arithmetic yerself on that one. According to the original contract the next step is to rip the big tube and it's support facilities out and return everything to it's original state before the oil patch was developed. We'll see. The oil companies would likely try to keep it open for future oil discovery or convert it to natural gas transport. That would be my first choice too.

In any case when the oil runs out there will be an incredible amount of work coming and it will last at least a normal persons working lifetime. I'm sure there will be lots of Helo work and a fair amount of fixed wing too.

I'd sure like to take a quick five year stint up there again. I could money up pretty heavy pretty quick that way.

EB


I was in a meeting with the Big wigs from ConocoPhillips last week and they said with the reserves we have now, and the new technology for recovering previously thought un-recoverable, or un-economic to recover oil, that they are planning now for a minimum of 40 more yrs here at Kuparuk. The increased work load we have now doing maintenance, and the projects that are working and being planned, damn sure show that they are here to stay and they are spending a ton... an obscene amount of money to prove it.

I am not worried in the least about my job going anwhere before I get lucky enough to walk into the bosses office, take a big shit on his desk and tell him I am outta here to go play the rest of my life LOL
akavidflyer offline
User avatar
Posts: 521
Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2010 7:36 pm
Location: Soldotna AK

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

akavidflyer wrote:
Emory Bored wrote:I've recently heard from my sources that pipeline through put is declining 7.9% per year at this point. Do the arithmetic yerself on that one. According to the original contract the next step is to rip the big tube and it's support facilities out and return everything to it's original state before the oil patch was developed. We'll see. The oil companies would likely try to keep it open for future oil discovery or convert it to natural gas transport. That would be my first choice too.

In any case when the oil runs out there will be an incredible amount of work coming and it will last at least a normal persons working lifetime. I'm sure there will be lots of Helo work and a fair amount of fixed wing too.

I'd sure like to take a quick five year stint up there again. I could money up pretty heavy pretty quick that way.

EB


I was in a meeting with the Big wigs from ConocoPhillips last week and they said with the reserves we have now, and the new technology for recovering previously thought un-recoverable, or un-economic to recover oil, that they are planning now for a minimum of 40 more yrs here at Kuparuk. The increased work load we have now doing maintenance, and the projects that are working and being planned, damn sure show that they are here to stay and they are spending a ton... an obscene amount of money to prove it.

I am not worried in the least about my job going anwhere before I get lucky enough to walk into the bosses office, take a big shit on his desk and tell him I am outta here to go play the rest of my life LOL

It's good to hear that Kuparuk is still in good shape. I never worked the patch, only the pipeline. Still, one worries where the bottom is for sustainable transport of oil when through put continues to drop every year. I'm sure you remember when we pumped 2.7 million barrels a day of hot 140* oil. The temp has dropped to below 100* and they have to send scraper pigs almost continuously now. The oil from North Star is heated before it even enters metering. The pipeline is not being maintained adequately now! On and on. I'm sure BP is thinking we'll maintain the thing if you drop the PFD......war is brewing. :D
Mister701 offline
User avatar
Posts: 2134
Joined: Thu Dec 05, 2013 11:13 pm
Location: Sparks
Aircraft: Rans S7LS

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Now that's some good advice!
mtv wrote:
N300RE wrote:Thanks for all the good input, so far it sounds promising as far as getting a job. If I have to stick it out in some shit hole for a little while, then I will.


If that's your attitude, DON'T go to Alaska. There are NO shitholes in Alaska unless you decide there are. My parents told me when I was growing up that you can find something good about every place, and you can find something bad about every place. If you choose to look at the negatives of a certain place, or view a work site as just some shithole you have to tolerate to get where you want to be, you're going to miss some of the best country and people on the planet.

There's a gent who posts on here periodically who went to Alaska to fly, and he's been on the YK Delta for a couple seasons now. He sends the most glowing reports of the flying there one could imagine. He describes seeing moose and other critters and the villages of the Delta.......Yet many would call that a shit hole.

Read some of Gump's descriptions of flying out of OTZ......and the people of that country. Sure, it's challenging flying, EVERYwhere in Alaska is challenging flying, some more than others, but the point is, there's always something to like about every place, especially in Alaska. But, some would call Kotzebue a shit hole.....

I mean no offense toward you in this little rant.....I just saw too many people come to one of the "shit holes" I worked in with the attitude that this was just something they had to tolerate to get to a "real" job. And, they totally missed all the fantastic stuff and people that were going on around them at the time.

If you do go to Alaska, go with the notion that wherever you wind up, there's going to be some fantastic flying, some really good people and things to see that very very few on this earth have ever seen. If you do that, you'll love your time in Alaska, and you'll maintain your sanity.

This from a guy who lived and worked in Cold Bay for three years. I always heard people refer to being "stuck" in Cold Bay.....but what fantastic country! I wouldn't trade that time for anything......

Good luck.

MTV
xcalibursword offline
User avatar
Posts: 142
Joined: Thu Dec 20, 2012 10:26 am
Location: Ava

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Couldn't agree more. Deciding somewhere is a shit hole before you get there is nothing but a recipe to be packing your bags in 6 weeks. Look at where I'm at, 16 years in paradise....lmao....anyway, there is always someplace worse.
porterjet offline
User avatar
Posts: 776
Joined: Tue Dec 08, 2009 11:37 am
Location: San Luis Obispo
John
KSBP

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Well??????? Didja get a job? :shock:

Gump
GumpAir offline
User avatar
Posts: 4557
Joined: Wed Feb 14, 2007 9:14 am
Location: Lost somewhere in Nevada
Aircraft: Old Clunker

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

flightlogic wrote:When I went to Nome... friends thought I was nuts. When I lived in Klawock...no one had heard of it.
When I was in Chignik... it was pretty lonely.
BUT... I met fascinating people at every stop. I learned what it was to be the minority member in the village.... a big surprise for a regular white guy.
Would never give back what I experienced all over Alaska. If that does not suit your personality, stick to the lower 48. And by the way.... no one I ever met got a job by writing to them. You had to be standing there... ready to go to work in the morning. That's just Alaska.


Who did you work for in Klawock?
Capt. Chaos offline
User avatar
Posts: 24
Joined: Mon Dec 02, 2013 10:41 am
Location: Klawock

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Not yet, the original plan was to start calling around now and knocking on doors towards the end of winter but I'm scared I might be miss my window. I was supposed to have my Citabria recovered by now but we lost our boss in October in a airplane accident and my plans have been delayed a little. Hopefully I should have my plane ready by March or April, will it be harder to find a job that late in the year? Or will my timing be OK?
N300RE offline
User avatar
Posts: 136
Joined: Tue Nov 27, 2012 7:20 pm
Location: Wasilla
Aircraft: C-185,PA-30, PA-24, PA-28

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

My recollection from my 3 years there is that Spring in AK is on June 7th (not starts then, is then) and Summer starts on June 8th. Good bet that you'll be there in plenty of time for the summer season. :)

Cary
Cary offline
User avatar
Posts: 3801
Joined: Sun Jan 10, 2010 6:49 pm
Location: Fort Collins, CO
"I have slipped the surly bonds of earth..., put out my hand and touched the face of God." J.G. Magee

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Flyalaska.com is a job post just for AK. They are starting advertise for the summer jobs now. Good luck
Headoutdaplane offline
User avatar
Posts: 526
Joined: Thu May 29, 2008 5:21 pm
Location: Homer, AK
The winner is the person with the most stories when he dies, not the most gold.
www.belugaair.com

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

March maybe....April is getting a little late.

Then again, jobs open all the time. As noted previously, the guy standing there ready to work the next morning has the best shot.

MTV
mtv offline
Knowledge Base Author
User avatar
Posts: 10514
Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2006 1:47 am
Location: Bozeman

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Do most places cut there pilots in the winter? I'd like to stay all year if possible, it gets expensive moving from Tx to Ak. I would assume there's a lot of maintenance work in the winter? Hopefully the A&P would help in that situation as well.
N300RE offline
User avatar
Posts: 136
Joined: Tue Nov 27, 2012 7:20 pm
Location: Wasilla
Aircraft: C-185,PA-30, PA-24, PA-28

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

I have been lurking a lot lately and am curious about this. I have been curious about going into flying commercially for a while now but I hear such varied stories about the stability of the job. I have one friend that flies for PenAir that has been trying to convince me for 2 years about how solid the work is. But then I get so hopeless when I poke around a little.

Are winter layoffs bad?

And for the record - I love Alaska. I love every part of Alaska. I love working and I love flying. I will be taking a GIGANTIC pay cut to leave my current career of 10 years to go flying. I would do it right now if I could, but I know at the very least I have to stay in my current job to get all of my debt paid off or I won't be able to afford flying as a job.
907Pilot offline
Posts: 230
Joined: Thu Mar 03, 2011 12:26 am
Location: Anchorage, AK

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

907Pilot wrote:I have been lurking a lot lately and am curious about this. I have been curious about going into flying commercially for a while now but I hear such varied stories about the stability of the job. I have one friend that flies for PenAir that has been trying to convince me for 2 years about how solid the work is. But then I get so hopeless when I poke around a little.

Are winter layoffs bad?

And for the record - I love Alaska. I love every part of Alaska. I love working and I love flying. I will be taking a GIGANTIC pay cut to leave my current career of 10 years to go flying. I would do it right now if I could, but I know at the very least I have to stay in my current job to get all of my debt paid off or I won't be able to afford flying as a job.


From what I know, the fact you live in AK and know people in commercial aviation would mean it's not hopeless. I am heading up to Talkeetna this March for some ski flight training.. going to check things out and see about hanging out in Talkeetna for the summer.
29singlespeed offline
Posts: 508
Joined: Mon Feb 21, 2011 7:10 pm
Location: Gunnison

Re: What's the Job Scene like in AK?

Well I just passed my CMEL check ride before Christmas, and plan on finishing CSEL before summer break. I should be graduating from school in December. I'm hoping to find a gig where I could keep on commercial fishing during the summers. I am curious if anyone knows of any companies that would be conducive to this. Thanks for any ideas, Ward.
alaskadrifter offline
User avatar
Posts: 93
Joined: Tue Sep 04, 2007 2:39 pm
Location: Anchorage

DISPLAY OPTIONS

PreviousNext
41 postsPage 2 of 31, 2, 3

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

Latest Features

Latest Knowledge Base