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It is possible to fly a US registered glider in Canada. There are two
"categories" "Category 1" flying with a Standard Certificate of Airworthiness for a type certified glider, or "Category 2" if your glider is registered as Experimental. 1. If you are NOT registered as Experimental - there is nothing you need do to, just drive across the border go to a gliding site assemble and fly. 2. If you ARE registered as Experimental, then you need permission from Transport Canada to fly your experimental glider in Canadian airspace. You can do this by making a written request to Transport Canada. The following link is a starting point for those who want to do their own research: http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/ma...validation.htm After speaking with somebody at Transport Canada that knows the current procedure for you to fly your “Experimental” glider in Canada it is now called a “Validation of Foreign Flight Authority”. Scan your Certificate of Registration and special Certificate of Airworthiness with the Letter of Operating Limitations. The documents should be in PDF format and the request should be sent to the following e-mail address: In the message state that you are requesting permission to fly your glider licenced in the “Experimental” category and where you plan to fly in Canada as well as the specific dates. Now - armed with that information - who wants to fly in the Canadian Nationals, North Battleford Saskatchewan from 15 - 25 June? North Battleford is a little north of Kalispell located at 52° 46′ 9″ N, 108° 14′ 37″ W and offers 10,000 AGL days with sunset at 11 pm! Google Map link: http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=52.76...67,-108.243611 |
#2
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Thanks for the great info. I should have asked here before I departed
for the trip. We don't hear much about soaring in Canada here, but keep them coming. -Gen On Mar 1, 11:43*am, Dave Springford wrote: It is possible to fly a US registered glider in Canada. *There are two "categories" "Category 1" *flying with a Standard Certificate of Airworthiness for a type certified glider, or "Category 2" if your glider is registered as Experimental. 1. If you are NOT registered as Experimental *- there is nothing you need do to, just drive across the border go to a gliding site assemble and fly. 2. If you ARE registered as Experimental, then you need permission from Transport Canada to fly your experimental glider in Canadian airspace. *You can do this by making a written request to Transport Canada. The following link is a starting point for those who want to do their own research:http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/ma...validation.htm After speaking with somebody at Transport Canada that knows the current procedure for you to fly your “Experimental” glider in Canada it is now called *a “Validation of Foreign Flight Authority”. Scan your Certificate of Registration and *special Certificate of Airworthiness with the Letter of Operating Limitations. The documents should be in PDF format and the request should be sent to the following e-mail address: In the message state that you are requesting permission to fly your glider licenced in the “Experimental” category and where you plan to fly in Canada as well as the specific dates. Now - armed with that information - who wants to fly in the Canadian Nationals, North Battleford Saskatchewan from 15 - 25 June? North Battleford is a little north of Kalispell located at 52° 46′ 9″ N, 108° 14′ 37″ W and offers 10,000 AGL days with sunset at 11 pm! Google Map link: http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=52.76...n=0.03,0.03&t=... |
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On Mar 1, 2:43*pm, Dave Springford wrote:
It is possible to fly a US registered glider in Canada. *There are two "categories" "Category 1" *flying with a Standard Certificate of Airworthiness for a type certified glider, or "Category 2" if your glider is registered as Experimental. 1. If you are NOT registered as Experimental *- there is nothing you need do to, just drive across the border go to a gliding site assemble and fly. 2. If you ARE registered as Experimental, then you need permission from Transport Canada to fly your experimental glider in Canadian airspace. *You can do this by making a written request to Transport Canada. The following link is a starting point for those who want to do their own research:http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/ma...validation.htm After speaking with somebody at Transport Canada that knows the current procedure for you to fly your “Experimental” glider in Canada it is now called *a “Validation of Foreign Flight Authority”. Scan your Certificate of Registration and *special Certificate of Airworthiness with the Letter of Operating Limitations. The documents should be in PDF format and the request should be sent to the following e-mail address: In the message state that you are requesting permission to fly your glider licenced in the “Experimental” category and where you plan to fly in Canada as well as the specific dates. Now - armed with that information - who wants to fly in the Canadian Nationals, North Battleford Saskatchewan from 15 - 25 June? North Battleford is a little north of Kalispell located at 52° 46′ 9″ N, 108° 14′ 37″ W and offers 10,000 AGL days with sunset at 11 pm! Google Map link: http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=52.76...n=0.03,0.03&t=... Too bad it overlaps the USA 18-meter nationals, as its only 38 hours drive from my house per Google... |
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On Mar 1, 5:42*pm, gen wrote:
Thanks for the great info. I should have asked here before I departed for the trip. We don't hear much about soaring in Canada here, but keep them coming. -Gen On Mar 1, 11:43*am, Dave Springford wrote: It is possible to fly a US registered glider in Canada. *There are two "categories" "Category 1" *flying with a Standard Certificate of Airworthiness for a type certified glider, or "Category 2" if your glider is registered as Experimental. 1. If you are NOT registered as Experimental *- there is nothing you need do to, just drive across the border go to a gliding site assemble and fly. 2. If you ARE registered as Experimental, then you need permission from Transport Canada to fly your experimental glider in Canadian airspace. *You can do this by making a written request to Transport Canada. The following link is a starting point for those who want to do their own research:http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/ma...validation.htm After speaking with somebody at Transport Canada that knows the current procedure for you to fly your “Experimental” glider in Canada it is now called *a “Validation of Foreign Flight Authority”. Scan your Certificate of Registration and *special Certificate of Airworthiness with the Letter of Operating Limitations. The documents should be in PDF format and the request should be sent to the following e-mail address: In the message state that you are requesting permission to fly your glider licenced in the “Experimental” category and where you plan to fly in Canada as well as the specific dates. Now - armed with that information - who wants to fly in the Canadian Nationals, North Battleford Saskatchewan from 15 - 25 June? North Battleford is a little north of Kalispell located at 52° 46′ 9″ N, 108° 14′ 37″ W and offers 10,000 AGL days with sunset at 11 pm! Google Map link: http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=52.76...n=0.03,0.03&t=... Interesting post on Kalispell, and it looks like Dave Springford has done all the homework for American pilots wanting to fly in Canada. Invermere is a commercial operation offering a 260 hp Pawnee towplane with a club also embedded at the site, and does have great soaring conditions. 1000 km flights have been done running up and down the Columbia River valley in which it sits. There is a closer operation to Kalispell than that. My home club is just outside Calgary at Black Diamond, Alberta, and I'm sure we could make tow arrangements for for visiting pilots if they called ahead. See our site at: http://www.cunim.org Of greater interest may be that there is a first class wave site just north of the border at Cowley, Alberta. The Alberta Soaring Council hosts two wave camps annually at the site, which it owns. Dates a July 24 to August 2, Oct. 2 to Oct. 11, 2010. The airfield is not active outside of those dates. Twenty to twenty five years ago, we used to get American pilots from Washington and Oregon coming up for the camp, but that doesn't seem to happen now. Full details can be found at: http://www.soaring.ab.ca/index.html Flights to 28,000 ft are possible if conditions are favorable. Please read the site specific material on the website very thoroughly before you come if you're inclined to attend. Memorable flights in spectacular scenery often occur, but it's an ecologically sensitive site subject to high winds with specific air space restrictions. Years ago, it used to be common to do cross country flights from Cowley into the Flathead valley, where cloud bases to 14,000 feet were reported. With regulations the way the are and In the current climate, however, Canadian glider pilots simply don't fly gliders cross the border any more. |
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