Alaska Maule

Owners story
Evidently I made a poor choice of landing sites. Until today, the plane was sitting on it’s top in the remote Boulder Creek drainage.
I was going to land and check out a back country cabin and take a break. There was a fair amount of turbulence and I was getting beat up pretty badly. I did a low and slow pass. Light was kind of flat and I guess there was enough ash/dust on the snow to make it look like a thin layer of snow over the underlying gravel. Made a second pass to drag the strip I had picked out. Gently put tires to earth and all was well. Firm and smooth. On the third pass I touched down without problem and started the rollout. Hit a small drift, maybe 6" tall but enough to bounce. Came back down as gently as possible but the wheels broke the crust and sank. Deeper than expected! Bounced higher and came down hard with little speed or lift left. Tires dug in, flipped me over, the tail dug in and pulled me sideways, tweaking the left wing. I was going so slow at that point there was really nothing to the impact.
Hanging upside down and looking through a busted windshield at snow is no fun. I crawled out onto the underside of the left wing. When I stepped off the wing, I went in about knee deep. Shakes head and thinks "stupid costs extra". I put snow shoes on, stomped around and cussed a bit. No cell service and I was pretty sure the ELT signal wouldn't reach out of the canyon. I did have a GPS signal though so I pushed the 911 on my SPOT unit. I hung out at the crash site for about an hour and a half. I was just about to walk up to the cabin when I saw headlights coming down stream.
Hooked up with a couple of snow machine riders who gave me a lift to the road. THANKS GUYS! Called the Troopers from the highway. The Trooper I talked with was really sold on the SPOT and said it worked perfectly. They were able to see I was walking around the plane even saw when I took off from the crash site at about 20mph so they knew I was OK and heading for the road.
Anyway, she was helicoptered out today and now sits on the ramp in Palmer. The damage isn’t as bad as I feared but it is not going to be inexpensive. Lessons like this seldom are I guess. It was a cheap lesson though. Cheap lessons are the ones you survive and I walked away from this one, literally, without a scratch.