I should start out by apologizing for not writing this sooner... We all know words come easier when the memories and details are fresh. Also don’t expect Ted Waltman level of writing here.
My name is Rob I am 31 and my aviation timeline goes like this. My wife and I bought a beautiful PA22/20 last August. I received my private pilot license this February. My tail wheel endorsement came in April. As did my A&P mechanic certification. I left for Alaska in May.
My wife and I were living in Colorado and dreaming of moving back to Alaska (her birth state, my spirit state). I often flew with Ted in his SQ-2 which lead to him being one of the inspirational frontrunners for adding aviation into my long love for hunting, fishing, and hiking the backcountry. I had many mechanical hurdles with the pacer while I worked towards my tail wheel endorsement but it all worked out.. and only about two weeks before I was to be at my first A&P Job, in alaska to boot! Work was north of the Arctic Circle, at the southern edge of the Brooks Range in Bettles, Alaska. After many long talks with my mentor Ted, as well as my father (former AK bush pilot), my mother (retired FAA) and of course my wife, I made the decision to fly the pacer to Alaska, solo. I needed the room for more gear being Bettles is off the road system in the summer, and any good A&P doesn’t come to work without their own tools which isn’t without weight. I also felt I needed to be the person to make the go/no go decision. Not a joint decision with a copilot. So here I was, a fresh A&P, fresh pilot, and 6.7hrs solo time in my own airplane. 100hrs or so total time. I weighed all my gear, arranged things, and calculated. I made calls and plotted lines on charts.
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One day early in may I took to the sky headed north. I told myself I would fly only when the weather was darn near perfect. It happened to be that most of all the days were just that. Talk about luck. My route took me by way of the highway, for safety and fuel stops, I planned to stop every 2 hours or so. One fuel stop brought me to a fellow with a Archer II. He offered to fly me to his farm strip for coffee and to see his glassaire project. Canada hospitality is truly unmatched.
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I met up with a facebook friend Jason near Edmonton, he greeted me with a beer and a place to sleep, then even took me on a flight of two flight see tour into Jasper!
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The next day was clear and I once again headed north. Somewhere around Fort Nelson I felt a change in the pacer, or was it in myself. I am not sure but there was a specific moment that I will never forget. I finally felt like I could FLY the pacer. Not just manage a smooth landing and operate it safely. It is tough to find the words, but we just clicked. Kinda like the time you meet a girl and its love at first... well, lets not go there shall we. I planned to land at Toadriver, but the winds were horrible, direct cross and lots of it. So i passed it up. But Mucho Lake was nice. This was my first real non typical airstrip landing. It went well and the scenery was magnificent as was the sand which from the deli down the road.
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Next was an abandoned airstrip about 10km west of the famous Liard hot springs. I buzzed it twice and put down after the spot of overgrown willows on the west end. A quick hitchhike due to bison on the highway and I was soaking in sulfur smelling 100*+ water.
https://share.icloud.com/photos/0bTF_-o ... _Rockies_B
The fun really started in Watson Lake, where I camped under the stars at the gazebo and met some new friends.
https://share.icloud.com/photos/0W2c_zl ... _Rockies_B
From here, I flew all the way to Tok with a C180, Maule, C170b and a backcountry cub. The fellow in the C170 is now a good friend of mine,John (aka Shiney), he also owns a pacer and lives just up the road from me in my new home of Homer Alaska. (More on that in a bit).
At Tok we all parted ways and I continued north even still. On the ground at fairbanks, I parked in possibly the coolest campground besides Watson Lake. Tied the pacer down and pitched the tent. I spent a few days shaking hands with my new boss, getting my AK drivers license, picking up my rifle/pistol from the FFL and loading even more food and some beer into the pacer.
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I remember taking off on the gravel from Fairbanks and being astonished at how much runway the pacer chewed up. Looking back, it was a warm day and I did just add groceries, beer and firearms to an already crowded airplane. My first jobs as an A&P in Bettles was to ready the airplanes that had been sitting all winter, and relocate two beavers, an otter and a C185 to the float pond via truck and trailer, dodging the fast growing willow trees that line the 3 mile stretch of road.
https://share.icloud.com/photos/0PGa4SM ... on-Koyukuk
Soon my work slowed down as the airplanes became airworthy. This meant I got to fly the pacer. ALOT. Almost every day in fact. I can count on one hand the number of IFR days we had this season. I kept a fuel tab running in the office and my wife gave me permission to fly as much as I could while up there. I started by just flying the pattern, over and over again. Working on my spot landings, they got better and better with time. One day I came into work and saw three super cubs parked out on the grass. So I wandered over and met Jarod and Suzie in their red and white cub named Maggie. I flew with them as a flight of two a couple of times and one night, around midnight with the sun high in the sky, He guided me into my first gravel bar landing. The bar was long, flat, and wide with great approaches. I was lucky enough to have.a good friend and photographer along in the super cub to capture it all.
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My first “Oh boy” moment came a few weeks later when I spotted a gravel bar I wanted to land on. First mistake was misreading the wind. Second was floating due to misreading of said wind. Third issue was caught by GoPro. Just as my tail was dropping, my left tire rolled over a rock roughly 4in taller than the rest. This caused my pacer to veer towards the river. I hit my right brake/rudder and it wasn’t coming around quick enough. I quickly added throttle and just as the tail came up, I hit the water. The beach was smooth and thankfully the pacer turned back to dry land. Many lessons learned there. I also made regular trips to Coldfoot for some cell phone coverage to upload videos and talk to my wife while enjoying a buffet dinner at the truck stop. I often would fuel up, and just fly the Koyukuk river low and slow right off the runway at Bettles. I saw moose, lynx, black bear, brown bear, swans, eagles, and boaters all from the river and sometimes rather close.
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I spotted moose deadheads, and Dall sheep in the park on almost every flight I took. I flew with the Lefore boys in their Rev and SQ2s deep into caribou country. I was buzzed at the runway threshold by a DC-6. I replaced a dead battery in our float C185 along a river in the rain. I went swimming in the river on 90* days. I even put 7.5hrs on my pacer in a SAR effort for an overdue boating party. They were found downstream of Bettles and unharmed luckily. Likely the most jaw dropping flight took me over the Arrigetch Peaks.
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I flew this multiple times and I look forward to going again. Another place I really enjoyed seemed a bit out of place. Just a couple hours west is the Kobuk Sand Dunes. What a unique landscape with unending mystic to it.
https://share.icloud.com/photos/03sokbw ... ional_Park
I did have some bucket list flights I have yet to complete. I still desire to dip my tail wheel in the Arctic Ocean, see a polar bear, muskox, and a wolf. As well as spot the sheefish running up the kobuk river, land on a gravel bar and catch them on rod and reel (maybe even fly rod). Brooks Range Aviation had an amazing year and I learned so much from my Boss Jay and all the pilots and locals. My Pacer was coined the Pinto Bean (another story for another time) and earned many of the standard “AK mods” such as VGs, 29’s, baby bush wheel and a patrol door. The season ends late as we mostly fly hunters and the determining factor to go home is when the ice forms on the lakes. I left Bettles on Oct 13th this year. I flew south to Nenana and while flying directly into the sun I developed a massive headache. No worries, I thought, I will stop short of Talkeetna and land at Healey. Well Healey was covered in fresh white powder. I should have dragged my tires a time or two first but I didn’t. That almost cost me a cold cold night as there is no taxi this time of year. If the snow would have been crusty, it could have easily cost me the airplane. It took multiple full throttle passes to plow a path and gain enough speed to get clear of the snow and into ground effect. A lot was learned here as well. The rest of the flight was severe clear and uneventful. I landed in Homer and had a short 24hrs before I loaded onto a Dash 8 and headed for Anchorage and then Denver. While I was making the money as they say, My wife is the true hero, she stayed in Denver this summer and worked full time while also purging and packing up all our belongings for our next adventure. We loaded up in two vehicles and drove back north (late October) to lay our heads in what is now our forever home, Homer, Alaska. I am currently looking for winter A&P work here, and you can bet your fuel sump cup I’ll be back in Bettles next summer. I have more adventures to partake in!
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I flew approximately 150hrs this summer. Roughly 500 gals of Avgas. And $4200. Nowhere but Alaska could I have learned all that I did for that kind of money. Nowhere but Alaska could have made these memories that will be with me for the rest of my life. I am grateful to have learned what I have and excited to continue learning.


