re: atkahoe1's comments (page 1)
There's no inherent advantage or disadvantage to high vs. low wing on high DA days. It's true that an overloaded/underpowered low wing plane might be able to rotate into ground effect, and then be unable to climb out of ground effect, but the root problem in that instance is one of overloading/underpowering the airplane, not the wing itself. And as for getting a low wing dinged up by unimproved airstrips, as someone else pointed out, same thing happens to the empenage on a high wing airplane (probably more so, since on rotation or landing flare the tailfeathers are closer to the runway surface than is the bottom side of a low wing.
If the rocks or brush are tall enough on a backcountry airstrip to seriously damage the underside of the wing of a low wing aircraft, they're also tall enough to take out a high wing airplane's elevator/tail cone/tail wheel during takeoff rotation or landing flare. Not to mention what it would do to your main landing gear, unless you've got the monster bush wheels, which relatively few have mounted even on typical high wing/taildragger aircraft.
The bigger advantage of most of the high-wing/conventional geared airplanes typically used at mountain unimproved airstrips is the gear, not the wing .... the spring-steel mains on a taildragger are typically stronger than the main gear struts used on tricycle-gear aircraft, and the tail-low attitude on landing get the prop disk more out of harm's way. However, the latter advantage also goes away on the takeoff roll, where taildraggers usually pop the tailwheel off the ground very quickly.
It's also a mistake to assume or generalize that "low-wingers" are "inexperienced" and high-wingers are experienced. Bonanza-man would likely take issue with that!
In many parts of the world low-wing aircraft are regularly used in back-country applications, for med-evac purposes, airmail and airfreight, and air taxi operations. The Cherokee Six and the Senecas are very commonly used in such applications - even in Alaska, I understand. It's true that the backcountry mountain flying typically done in the western US is dominated by high wing, conventional greared aircraft, and for good reasons. But I am told that Johnson Creek (never having flown in there myself) is not a problem for a typical low wing, tricycle gear aircraft as long as the pilot knows his aircraft and its performance envelope, and pays attention to DA (which applies to any aircraft and its pilot). Ditto with many of the backcountry airstrips here in New Mexico, which tend to have much higher DA to contend with than you'll usually see in Idaho. Most of our mountain strips are at upwards of 7,000-9,000 feet elevation, and it gets hotter here than in Idaho (I know - I lived 8 years in Idaho).



