West of Merritt, BC there is a crash site which always moves me .... :>( It's a 10k hike to get into the actual location on a good trail.
When you first see it from a couple of kms, it looks like a model aircraft came to grief. As you get closer and see the wreckage up close, it is staggering as you realize that it is a grave site and a brave man died there. The engines, props, landing gear are strewn about like a giant hand scattered them.
The aircraft is a Grumman "Tracker" water bomber. The pilot was returning to base from a sortie, tired and obviously made an error as he just clipped the mountain top. You are asked not to remove debris out of respect. The local Outdoors Hiking club was looking into establishing a memorial cairn.
When you first see it from a couple of kms, it looks like a model aircraft came to grief. As you get closer and see the wreckage up close, it is staggering as you realize that it is a grave site and a brave man died there. The engines, props, landing gear are strewn about like a giant hand scattered them.
The aircraft is a Grumman "Tracker" water bomber. The pilot was returning to base from a sortie, tired and obviously made an error as he just clipped the mountain top. You are asked not to remove debris out of respect. The local Outdoors Hiking club was looking into establishing a memorial cairn.
Every crash sight is disturbing, but I am always particularly disturbed standing on a hill, ridge, mountain and see that if the plane had only been X feet higher, it would have been ok.
As a pilot, having seen such crashes before, I was always extra cautious about poor visibility and high terrain. Every pilot knows about cumulo granite clouds.