![]() |
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 |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I appear to have volunteered for a task I know nothing about.
My friend who owns a Cherokee was approached by a neighbour who advised him that his father was dying and has asked that his ashes be scattered from an aircraft over a rural area near where I live. My friend volunteered, then thought that a high wing may do the job better, and asked me if I would do it in my 172 - in a weak moment I agreed. Throwing the sealed bag out of the window is an appealing option for its simplicity, but I doubt that next of kin or persons on terra firma would agree. An open bag, thrown out of the window may or may not empty on its way down - not reliable enough. Also I don't want the dear departed to hit the horizontal stab and take us with him. Tipping the contents of the bag out of the window would, I suspect, result in the contents siphoning back into the cockpit. A tube hanging out of the window, with a funnel at the top? That may create a venturi effect and cleanly suck the ashes out of the plane. Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Almost Instrument ![]() Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
My primary instructor had done this professionally for a while.
His first attempt, emptying a bag through the window, resulted in the ashes flying into the back and covering the widow and the priest. Not ideal. He ended up using a length of pipe (plastic I suppose), as long as reasonably possible given that it has to be stored and manoeuvered in the cockpit. At the moment, the passenger threads it through the open window then empties the ashes down the pipe. This should keep it out of the slipstream. Of course nobody would actually *know* if the ashes of the departed ended up mainly stuck to the oil film on the belly, but it's probably better if they don't. John "tony roberts" wrote in message news:nospam-A53B13.21060101122003@shawnews... I appear to have volunteered for a task I know nothing about. My friend who owns a Cherokee was approached by a neighbour who advised him that his father was dying and has asked that his ashes be scattered from an aircraft over a rural area near where I live. My friend volunteered, then thought that a high wing may do the job better, and asked me if I would do it in my 172 - in a weak moment I agreed. Throwing the sealed bag out of the window is an appealing option for its simplicity, but I doubt that next of kin or persons on terra firma would agree. An open bag, thrown out of the window may or may not empty on its way down - not reliable enough. Also I don't want the dear departed to hit the horizontal stab and take us with him. Tipping the contents of the bag out of the window would, I suspect, result in the contents siphoning back into the cockpit. A tube hanging out of the window, with a funnel at the top? That may create a venturi effect and cleanly suck the ashes out of the plane. Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Almost Instrument ![]() Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 02 Dec 2003 05:05:57 GMT, tony roberts
wrote: I appear to have volunteered for a task I know nothing about. My friend who owns a Cherokee was approached by a neighbour who advised him that his father was dying and has asked that his ashes be scattered from an aircraft over a rural area near where I live. My friend volunteered, then thought that a high wing may do the job better, and asked me if I would do it in my 172 - in a weak moment I agreed. Throwing the sealed bag out of the window is an appealing option for its simplicity, but I doubt that next of kin or persons on terra firma would agree. An open bag, thrown out of the window may or may not empty on its way down - not reliable enough. Also I don't want the dear departed to hit the horizontal stab and take us with him. Tipping the contents of the bag out of the window would, I suspect, result in the contents siphoning back into the cockpit. I can confirm that this is exactly what will happen in a 172. I'm not sure we ever got all the ashes out of the back of that plane. A tube hanging out of the window, with a funnel at the top? That may create a venturi effect and cleanly suck the ashes out of the plane. That's what I was thinking of trying next time, if there is a next time. The tube, if long enough, should allow you to get the ashes below the level of the horizontal stab. It's amazing how well that ash sticks to the surface of a plane. Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. David Hill Sautete-Nacoochee, GA, USA david at hillREMOVETHISfamilly dot org www.hillfamily.org |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
David Hill ) wrote:
I can confirm that this is exactly what will happen in a 172. I'm not sure we ever got all the ashes out of the back of that plane. Perhaps the idea of being with you on every flight is more appealing to the deceased anyhow... -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
("tony roberts" wrote)
snip Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. This topic comes up every once in a while and usually generates some "interesting" posts. Practice using your homemade contraption ....with flour. g That was someone's advice in a previous (How to keep Uncle Charlie from reentering the plane) thread. Good luck. -- Montblack http://lumma.de/mt/archives/bart.gif |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Montblack" wrote in message ... ("tony roberts" wrote) snip Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. This is a wind up surely? |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
This is a wind up surely?
Why would you think that? From the reading that I have done over the last couple of days, and from the responses posted here, it does not appear to be a unique event. -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Almost Instrument ![]() Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2-Dec-2003, tony roberts wrote:
Throwing the sealed bag out of the window is an appealing option for its simplicity, but I doubt that next of kin or persons on terra firma would agree. . . . Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. Threw my mother out over sea a couple of months ago. Technique: Plane: Cessna 172. - Used the urn the crematorium supplied. - Made a wire cage around it with a grip on the bottom. If you held the grip, the urn was upside down. - Made a security line from the grip to the right seat (in case someone let go of the grip). - Open the urn, cover the opening with cardboard. - Open BOTH windows. - Enter a slip, apparent wind comes from the left. Hold open the left window with your elbow. - Let the front passenger (no, not my mother) hold the urn outside as far out as possible. - Remove the cardboard. Result: ashes dispersed, no ashes inside. I made this flight with my two brothers as passsengers. One flies ultralights, the other is a parajumper. We thought this was a fitting family outing. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I was involved in this same ash spreading mission, a couple years back, over
a certain location where a friend use to hunt. I flew the 182 at approx. 100 mph, 10 degrees flap, at 10,000 feet msl. We were surprised to find the ashes were not all fine powder but had some chunks. The passenger in the right seat had the baggie of ashes and opened the window, stuck his arm out as far as he could and punched a hole in the plastic with his finger. IIRC, the passenger behind him helped hold the window open. It took approx. 15 miles. The comments from him was the air was quit cold and he had to keep enlarging the hole, one handed, in the baggie for the bigger chunks. I did not notice any dust coming into the cabin nor did I notice any ashes on the airplane when we landed. We then cruised the "Rocky mountain range" as they told stories of hunting with him and pointed out areas where he got that elk, deer, and other great stories, a very moving experience. We got a seriously good laugh when it was pointed out the westerly winds might drift the ashes over the not too popular game warden's house (OT story). I hope some day this is how I go, "please don't bury me, down in that cold cold ground... Pat Thronson "tony roberts" wrote in message news:nospam-A53B13.21060101122003@shawnews... I appear to have volunteered for a task I know nothing about. My friend who owns a Cherokee was approached by a neighbour who advised him that his father was dying and has asked that his ashes be scattered from an aircraft over a rural area near where I live. My friend volunteered, then thought that a high wing may do the job better, and asked me if I would do it in my 172 - in a weak moment I agreed. Throwing the sealed bag out of the window is an appealing option for its simplicity, but I doubt that next of kin or persons on terra firma would agree. An open bag, thrown out of the window may or may not empty on its way down - not reliable enough. Also I don't want the dear departed to hit the horizontal stab and take us with him. Tipping the contents of the bag out of the window would, I suspect, result in the contents siphoning back into the cockpit. A tube hanging out of the window, with a funnel at the top? That may create a venturi effect and cleanly suck the ashes out of the plane. Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Almost Instrument ![]() Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
This article from AOPA should help:
http://www.aopa.org/members/files/topics/burial.html Good Luck, Marco "tony roberts" wrote in message news:nospam-A53B13.21060101122003@shawnews... I appear to have volunteered for a task I know nothing about. My friend who owns a Cherokee was approached by a neighbour who advised him that his father was dying and has asked that his ashes be scattered from an aircraft over a rural area near where I live. My friend volunteered, then thought that a high wing may do the job better, and asked me if I would do it in my 172 - in a weak moment I agreed. Throwing the sealed bag out of the window is an appealing option for its simplicity, but I doubt that next of kin or persons on terra firma would agree. An open bag, thrown out of the window may or may not empty on its way down - not reliable enough. Also I don't want the dear departed to hit the horizontal stab and take us with him. Tipping the contents of the bag out of the window would, I suspect, result in the contents siphoning back into the cockpit. A tube hanging out of the window, with a funnel at the top? That may create a venturi effect and cleanly suck the ashes out of the plane. Has anyone ever disposed of cremated remains from a light plane? How did you do it? All suggestions/ideas gratefully received. -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Almost Instrument ![]() Cessna 172H C-GICE Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Aviation Video: Another F-16 bites the dust | Iwan Bogels | Instrument Flight Rules | 0 | September 21st 04 07:02 AM |
Aviation Video: Another F-16 bites the dust | Iwan Bogels | Owning | 0 | September 21st 04 07:02 AM |
Russia & India to send joint manned mission to Moon | Michael Petukhov | Military Aviation | 84 | November 20th 03 11:04 PM |
FS: Aviation History Books | Neil Cournoyer | Military Aviation | 0 | August 26th 03 08:32 PM |