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Old April 6th 04, 07:23 PM
Bill Denton
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I have a friend who used to fly petroleum pipeline patrols in Piper Warriors
at 50' AGL looking for leaks.

And at that altitude, the airplane is well within reach of the weapons
carried by people who might be out there near the pipelines growing things
they shouldn't be growing.

He told me that on a couple of days he picked up two hits, but mostly he
would just get a single hit a couple of times a week when he flew in certain
areas. He said it was obvious they weren't trying to bring him down as the
hits were rarely in a critical area; they mainly just wanted to scare him
away. If they'd brought a plane down it would have attracted even more
attention which was what they were trying to avoid in the first place.

And I imagine there are a lot more stories out there that we never hear
about!


"G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message
...


Malcolm Teas wrote:

Assuming that I'm NOT flying an ag plane, what's a good altitude to be
above to avoid gunshot in hunting season?


1,000' AGL will keep you well out of shotgun range. A good rifle can carry

several
miles, but that's measured on the flat when the rifle is fired upwards at

a 45 degree
angle. Accurate range for a rifle is only from about 300 yards to 1,200

yards. Most
rifle hunters will not be firing in the air unless they're deliberately

shooting at
you. In that case, your best hope is the fact that few of them have much

practice
trying to hit objects moving as fast as you are. Most rifle hunters don't

know how to
lead a target, either. Most shotgun users are quite good at it.

George Patterson
This marriage is off to a shaky start. The groom just asked the band

to
play "Your cheatin' heart", and the bride just requested "Don't come

home
a'drinkin' with lovin' on your mind".