Airport comments for British Columbia, Canada

Comments 201 to 224 of 224

Picture of Lommer

re: My Home Base

The are several important reporting points:

South: Point Roberts

North: Alex Fraser Bridge (on Hwy 91)

East: 99 and the Nickel river (barely south of the hwy 99 and king george hwy interchange), 99 and the serpentine river (west of King george airpark; i'd recommend calling up over the airpark though when inbound), the gas pumps (intersection of ladner trunk and hwy 99)

That said, there are several unusual procedures in place, RH circuits on Rwy 25, and inbound/outbound traffic procedures to avoid interference with Delta Airpark to the East. I highly recommend getting a hold of a CFS and looking at the traffic flow maps in there, for first time visitors CZBB can be very confusing. That said, the southbound dep/arr is pretty straightforward.

Picture of bobc

re: My Home Base

Hi Intheclag,

I'll be flying up from Renton (KRNT) next Saturday (4/19) around noon to land at KZBB.

I don't have a CFS, just the VFR chart. Can you elaborate on the reporting points - tell me which ones to expect and their lat/longs? I plan to fly over Pt Roberts, and will be on Flt Following.

Thanks,

Picture of flying.Dutchman

nice airport

Good coffee friendly people

Picture of CDN_Av8r

Gorgeous

Another one of my Favs!

Picture of CDN_Av8r

Bronson Creek

This gravel strip is still in great shape and the camp is alive and well in the summer months (Summer 2007). My favourite airport ever.

Picture of david

TSB final report for Caravan crash

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada has released its final report on the Cessna 208 Caravan that crashed in January 2006 while trying glide to the Port Alberni Airport after an engine failure (five out of eight occupants survived):

http://www.tsb.gc.ca/en/reports/air/2006/a06p0010/a06p0010.asp

Picture of Desert185

Nothing

There's nothing there, so it's a great place to make an unlikely pit stop between Penticton and Prince George when the weather is down at Williams Lake and you've had too much coffee for breakfast.

Picture of Lommer

Effectively a 1-way strip

100 mile house's runway has a favourable gradient for landing eastbound and taking off westbound. This combined with a big hill to the east makes it effectively a 1-way strip. Watch out for your density altitude as the hot summer days can reach > 30 degrees C regularly. If your runway length is tight, you can begin your takeoff roll on the ramp as only a very slight turn is required from there to line up with the runway. The airport itself is quite scenic, and it's close to the town - either a medium-length walk or a very short cab ride.

Picture of philippe

Short and interesting

The runway here is quite short (1520ft) and has ravines at both ends, plus downdrafts. I went there with an instructor from Victoria and he told me nobody got it right on the first approach. I didn't either. Backtracking to take off, he showed be tire skid marks that went to the edge of the pavement, then disappeared in the bushes down the ravine...

Picture of Darbs

Just driving by!

That was my comment above. More photos of Chilko Lake and vicinity can be found on my Virtual Tourist pages for this area. (Darby2)

http://members.virtualtourist.com/m/3bd31/de3dc/

~Darbs

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Just driving by!

I made a trip by road this summer to Tsuniah Lake via the back road from Chilko Lake as I have done several times in the past. The fishing in Tsuniah was fabulous as usual.

There were two planes parked on the turf nearby.

Picture of Ozguy

YVR

Possibly the world's nicest city, and a very efficient airport.

Picture of Aviatrix

Maybe it doesn't count

I've done the PAR and the missed but not actually landed.

Picture of Aviatrix

They paved it.

That's it. They paved it. It used to be grass. I guess there were people who said that when they paved what is now Pearson.

Picture of Desert185

Good Fuel Stop

Dease Lake is a good fuel stop along the Cassiar Hwy with cheaper fuel than Whitehorse, Watson Lake or Smithers. Jim and Sharon of Pacific Western Helicopters run the only fuel concession at the northeast end of the field. They can help you get a room nearby, too.

deaselakebase@pwh.ca

250-771-5911

ASOS 128.7

Picture of AlexDenham

Abbotsford Airport

Did my training here. Great training airport and excellent tower staff that were very facilitating and patient. Good place for IFR training too.

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golf

Golf course and resort short walk from field. Services and 100ll available

Picture of Lommer

Prior permission required

Great little airport, watch out for extremely strong crosswinds on some days. Prior permission is required, but is usually given if you have business at either of the two nearby ranches.

Picture of Intheclag

Feet Wet!

Beautiful part of the world if you are willing to make the long overwater flight in a light single. No 100LL available so fill up before you make the trip. Nice little motel with a great pub adjacent to the terminal building. Rental cars also in the terminal if you want to explore the Islands.

Picture of bb4

Delta Heritage Air Park Website

Check out http://www3.telus.net/airpark.

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Delta Heritage Air Park WiFi Service

Delta now has WiFi service at the Coffee Shop. Bring your laptop and do your flight planning on line at the Coffee Shop!

Picture of Intheclag

My Home Base

Boundary Bay is home base to my little Piper Archer. It's a very busy GA airport about a 30 minute drive south of Downtown Vancouver.

Runway 07-25 was recently restored back to it's original 5000' length. There is no proper FBO here, just a managment company that runs the field and sells the fuel and acts as landlord to the many flying schools and other aviation related businesses. Services are minimal and the fuel price tends to be one of the highest in the region, no self serve, truck only.

Still, this is a reasonable option if you are flying yourself in to Vancouver. No landing fees and it's the closest airport to downtown other than YVR itself. It's a Canpass airport if you are coming from the US, but note that the Canpass hours are limited, typically 10:00PM is the latest you can arrive.

Transit here is poor, a few buses a day, so plan on arranging a rental car to be delivered or take a taxi. Be warned the taxi fare will be well over $50 and in rush hour there can be significant traffic.

There's a Nav Canada PIK (pilot information kiosk) in the main terminal building, and if you hang out near the Pacific Flying Club building you can usually log in to their WiFi.

Because of the intense flight school traffic and the proximity of this field in and under the airspace for Vancouver International, you need to study arrival and departure procedures in the CFS with great care, and if possible enter the VFR reporting points in to your GPS. The tower expects you to know these procedures and fly them accurately. Pay special attention to the various airspace ceiling heights, they are a bit unusual.

Picture of philippe

Victoria Flying Club

The folks at the local flight school, Victoria Flying Club, are nice and competent and their aircraft are very well kept. Very nice area to fly around if you're visiting.

Picture of philippe

Great beach within 5 minutes walk

If you park on the western ramp, there is a path that takes you through a campground and then accross the road to a beautiful footpath through the woods and a fantastic beach. Beautiful place. I'm jealous of all these west coast folks.