I am definitely trying this the next time I've got the Bush Hawk in the water!

I think that's one of the reasons one of my SES instructors last summer said that I wouldn't be a real seaplane pilot until I'd fallen in--guess I'm not a real one, yet, regardless of what the FAA says.mtv wrote:Hell, that's the easy part......getting safely alongside n a wind, and grabbing a bow line while leaping gracefully to the dock and snagging that cleat is the hard part.
Dock hands?? What are they?
Oh, yeah, add in ice on float deck and dock to make it a bit more sporty.....
MTV
Thanks for the encouragement! Same rule in boating, though--and that's happened a few times in the last 63 years (started boating at age 8 ).mtv wrote:Went in over my head at a dock on Afognak Island, when the walk wire broke. Never trusted walk wires since........ Fortunately, fished out rapidly by the resident. Dragged inside and dried out....about 31 F at the time.
You may or may not be a "real" seaplane pilot till you've gone swimming, but do it enough, and you will.
MTV
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