![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I landed a TG-3 in a prison farm in North Carolina
-- twice. The first person who approached me asked how many people the glider would hold; then he asked me if I had any money. He then said that he was a trustee and that he wanted to sell me a wallet he had made. The warden finally showed up and was extremely cordial. We were able to tow out and the next time I got low in that area I hunted up the same field and went into it. (This was back in 1964.) At 16:30 04 May 2005, T O D D P A T T I S T wrote: 'BTIZ' wrote: There was a thread or article at one time.. of Game Wardens in Jackson Wyoming ticketing hang gliders for landing within the park.. or reserve. Soaring from Driggs Idaho, Glider pilots have been cautioned not to get caught on the wrong side of the Grand Tetons and have to land in the park.. unless you can make the runway at Jackson Hole.. At least one glider pilot renting the L-13 at Driggs has landed on the wrong side of the Grand Tetons and paid the fine. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Along time ago, during a National contest out of Odessa, TX,I landed a
1-23 in a cotton field on the grounds of the Texas State Hospital for the mentally challenged -- my crew suggested that the hospital staff should keep me -- made Sports Illustrated, as I recall. YC Nyal Williams wrote: I landed a TG-3 in a prison farm in North Carolina -- twice. The first person who approached me asked how many people the glider would hold; then he asked me if I had any money. He then said that he was a trustee and that he wanted to sell me a wallet he had made. The warden finally showed up and was extremely cordial. We were able to tow out and the next time I got low in that area I hunted up the same field and went into it. (This was back in 1964.) |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I can tell of at least 2 instances where private airports have been sold,
torn up for farming and even after proper notification, they still remained on the charts for very long periods of time! One for 3 years! When asked about this, one official told me that he got no letter from the former airport owner saying that it was closed and sold. When I told them that this fellow had died and had NO LIVING heirs, I was told, sorry I can not remove it without authorization. What a crock of sh-t!!!!!! I had to have several letters written by the estate executor 3 years after the estate was settled, to get this strip removed. By the way, a glider at a local contest landed in the new farmers hayfield, he got out and thought "what a nice place for an airstrip" He looked around and found the old hanger building with the airport name still on it. We sent the trailer for him!!!!!! "BTIZ" wrote in message news:mDWde.9774$fI.2464@fed1read05... I am not a lawyer or the police, but I remember reading a similar article, maybe in the SSA Magazine. I believe you are correct about the "Safe harbor" law... you are either going to land safely on their runway or hayfield.. or crash land somewhere else and risk personal injury. I do not believe he can detain you.. If he detains you.. he can be charged with false imprisonment. He can call the constabulary and request a charge of trespass be made.. that charge may not hold up in court. He can reasonably expect that costs will be covered for damaged crops caused by landing or retrieving the glider, or damage to a fence that may have been cut be properly repaired. If he demands to keep the glider as collateral for damages, then he assumes all responsibility for your $100,000 glider in event it is damaged while in his care. Politely inform him of that and ask if he is willing to sign a receipt for your $100,000 glider, on his possible $2000 crop damage. You do not have to leave him your trailer to keep your glider in nor the support or tie down. He needs to make room in his barn/garage/shed to reasonably care for your glider as you would. Granted, the prudent owner would want his glider in the glider box. If he does chose to detain you or try to prevent you from retrieving your glider to keep it safe, then you should call for the local constabulary. Remember, barn animals: horses, cows, steers, sheep tend to like white fiberglass gliders. Any time he prevents you from sheltering your equipment, he assumes responsibility for safe keeping of same. Many pilots carry an extra chain lock in their trailer, so if a gate chain needs to be cut to get a glider out of a field, cut a chain link, not the lock, and put your new lock in the chain. The chain now has two locks, one the owner can open. If you are able to contact the owner, send them the key, and offer to replace the chain. As for old closed runways that are no longer serviceable still on charts ... until someone tells the FAA chart makers that the runway is gone.. it stays on the charts. Some runways, even private ones, are there for "navigational purposes", especially in remote areas where the runway is the only major man made landmark. Lets both do a search in SSA and "Google" and see what we can come up with. BT "2NO" wrote in message ps.com... There was a discussion about this last year, and I'm sure it comes up regularly, but I'd like to get some feedback from pilots with both legal and practical experience regarding one's rights (if any) upon making an emergency landing on private property in the USA. My aroused curiosity stems from this quote from an FAA contact regarding private airports on FAA sectionals: "Please note that private use airports in the FAA's National Airspace System are for the use of the owner only or with the permission of the owner only. Other users are not authorized and should not be attempting to land at private use airports." This made me wonder why the FAA even puts them on their charts at all, and why they often remain there long after the "airport" has turned into a landfill or housing development. But I digress ... If I make an emergency landing on private property (regardless of whether it's an airport), does the owner have the legal right to detain me? I seem to recall in a previous discussion a reference to something like a "safe harbor" law that permits persons, such as lost hikers, to take refuge in private property in order to escape danger (bad weather, etc), and that this law has been applied to aviators who had to put down somewhere. If this is true, I'd like to learn the details, should I ever end up in such a predicament... TW |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Alistair
Wright writes In the UK in my time (some years ago now) whenever I landed in a farmer's field I always offered the farmer a free ride in a two-seater if he cared to turn up at our Club. I have been royally entertained by farmer's wives all over England. Once I even got invited to a birthday party that was going on in the house next my landing field. I wasn't intoxicated when I landed, but I sure was by the time the retrieve arrived! Twice the farmer who turned up for his free ride actually joined the club and went on to solo!! Aeons ago, when I was doing my silver distance from the Wrekin GC at Cosford, I had to radio base to say I was landing out in "a nice big field near a power station", about 10 miles west of the airfield. I expected a couple of hour's wait for the recovery, and was very surprised to see the Chipmonk drop into the field about 15 minutes later. Thoughts of a quick retrieve were dashed when the Tug's passenger jumped into 'my' K8, and I was ordered to hold the wingtip, then to "keep running east". As the aerotow roared off over the eastern boundary, the farmer appeared from the opposite direction, one hand on the tractor's steering wheel, the other waving a shotgun. I did as I was told! I reckon it would have to be a pretty dour individual who was not impressed by having a glider land on his property. I learned in the bar, hours later, having walked back, that the farmer was notorious, and had prevented gliders being retrieved from his field. -- Keith |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I've retrieved gliders from both a military airfield and prison
grounds. I picked up a Kestrel 17 from China Lake. The pilot told me that he called the tower and was denied permission to land. Once the pilot declared an emergency, he was cleared to land by the tower - just in time as he was 5 feet over the runway! The Tehachapi Prison retrieve was a hassle but only because of the soggy terrain. The prison sent a guard over to watch over us and he kept us entertained with "prison" stories. Good thing the pilot landed in some outlying land and not within the bad guy compound. I memorialized this retrieve in a webpage: Cu skies, Steve AM |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Declaring an emergency seems to absolve you from a lot of potential
legal problems since the aviation regulations in most countries permit any reasonable action to save the aircraft and persons on board. There doesn't seem to be any strict legal test for what constitutes an emergency. If the pilot thinks he has one, that's enough in most cases. Inability to find lift on a cross-country flight is pretty much akin to engine failure of an airplane and could constitute an emergency. This should also be the case with gliders landing in US National Parks. |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
If asked to state the nature of the emergency, just say "zero fuel!"
![]() However, you are not absolved from having to explain the lack of planning that led up to the "emergency", so be prepared for that. Experienced pilots tend to push the limits as flight after flight, they find lift in a particular area or circumstance, so arrive lower and lower, with fewer options. One day this doesn't work, and now it's oops!, gotta land in those trees, or that lake, or that military or airport within class B/C airspace (without prior approval). -Tom |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
Diamond DA-40 with G-1000 pirep | C J Campbell | Instrument Flight Rules | 117 | July 22nd 04 05:40 PM |
General Aviation Legal Defense Fund | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Home Built | 3 | May 14th 04 11:55 AM |
General Aviation Legal Defense Fund | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | May 11th 04 10:43 PM |
General Aviation Legal Defense Fund | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | May 11th 04 10:43 PM |