Refuge Notebook
Peninsula Clarion Article
Dated
23 July 1999
Grand Flying Heritage
by Rick Johnston
Imagine flying at 3,000 feet over the Tustumena benchlands in an open cock pit
Travel Air 7,000 biplane. Your Travel Air Pegasus is equipped with floats and
your pilot is Alaska flying legend Russell Merrill. The year is 1929 and aviation
is new to the Kenai Peninsula and every flight an adventure. Tustumena Lake unfolds
before you like a vast prairie before a galloping stallion. The world, for the
moment, is yours for the taking. Seventy years later, both residents and visitors
to the Kenai Peninsula have many opportunities to almost duplicate such wonderful
flight-seeing adventures over the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge.
Although
the open cockpits of the early biplanes have been replaced by the relative comfort
of Cessnas, DeHavilands and Pipers, aviators and passengers can still experience
many of the same sights, wildland viewing, and emotions shared by the early fliers.
Wildlife and wildlands still provide the same allure that they did for pioneering
pilots like Russell Merrill, Ed Young and Matt Nieminen, who flew for Anchorage
Air Transport. Thanks to the foresight of early Peninsula residents and visitors
who sought to protect this rich legacy of wildlands, the Kenai National Wildlife
Refuge remains much the same as when the first airborne hunters, fishermen, and
explorers experienced it from the air in the 1920's.
Aviation on the Kenai
Peninsula, like most places in Alaska remains an inseperable part of the culture
and history, not to mention the source of some tales of adventure and misfortune.
In the Interior some areas have tundra flats or other natural features
that facilitate aircraft operations, but it is the numerous and well distributed
lakes on the Kenai Peninsula that make it one of the best flying destinations
in Alaska and indeed in North America. There are hundreds of lakes that can be
safely landed on, many of which provide outstanding outdoor recreational opportunities.
Managers of the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge (and its predecessor the
Kenai National Moose Range) have used aircraft in every aspect of management since
the arrival of the first Moose Range manager in 1948; World War II flying veteran
Dave Spencer was chosen for the top post in part due to his flying skills. There
had been a lot of moose poaching on the Peninsula, and the Bureau of Sports Fisheries
and Wildlife wanted biologist/pilot Spencer to solve the problem.
The Grumman
Widgeon and Grumman Goose became the workhorses on the Kenai Refuge and throughout
Alaska. Then, as today, aircraft were used for wildlife surveys, radio telemetry,
vegetation mapping and inventory, fisheries management, law enforcement patrols,
cargo and crew transport, fire suppression and management, and search-and-rescue.
Many lost hikers, hunters and other Refuge visitors have been located by Refuge
pilots.
Refuge manager/pilots such as John Hakala, Will Troyer, Averill
Thayer, Bob Richey, Vern Berns and others flew tens of thousands of hours over
the Kenai Peninsula and the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge during their distinguished
flying careers. The safety record of these Refuge pilots was second to none despite
often difficult flying conditions. Many of the hours were what the Department
of Interior calls ?special use? flying which require a high level of skill and
training due to low level flying or inherent risk of particular assignments.
John
Hakala caught his first glimpse of the Kenai from the air while piloting a B-25
during a military training flight out of Anchorage. He didn't know then that he
would later pilot Refuge aircraft during two separate duty assignments as Refuge
Manager, and retire on a popular float plane lake in the Soldotna area.
Refuge
managers have often sought the assistance of local flying services, especially
for helicopters. At least one Kenai Peninsula-based helicopter service is used
statewide on difficult wildlife capture projects. Many of these sought-after skills
were honed right here on the Kenai Peninsula and Kenai National Wildlife Refuge.
Private air taxis from Lake Hood in Anchorage and from locations on the
Kenai Peninsula have been transporting hunters, fisherman, sightseers and trappers
to Refuge destinations since the early days of Anchorage Air Transport. Several
Kenai Peninsula air services had financial arrangements with early trappers for
remote drop-offs and pick-ups, and mid-winter supply flights. Greg Brown, a lifelong
Alaskan, was by all accounts a very skilled pilot and outdoorsman and transported
people to many remote locations via his Kenai-based airplane. Brown?s Lake formerly
within the Refuge was a named after Brown.
The Kenai Peninsula is extremely
popular as a float plane destination, and also experiences a large volume of commercial
and general aviation usage. According to the FAA there are 5,699 active pilots
within an hour?s flight of the Refuge, and more than 8,000 general aviation and
commercial aircraft in Alaska. Aircraft use in a popular area near such a high
population of pilots and commercial flight services has not been without problems.
Trumpeter swans and floatplane fisherman often prefer the same lakes, sometimes
resulting in displacement of nesting trumpeter swans and lower swan productivity
due to disturbance.
Some visitors using lakes accessible by roads and trails
have been distressed by busy aircraft operations. Furthermore some with airplanes
have used them as a tool for unfair or unethical advantage for hunting big game.
As early as 1970, Refuge and state game managers published aircraft and wildlife
regulations to reduce airplane-wildlife and airplane-people conflicts, and to
insure fair chase for Peninsula wildlife. The northern lowlands of the Kenai Refuge
became one of the first places in Alaska to restrict the use of airplanes for
hunting moose during the first ten days of the season. Subsequently state and
federal laws and regulations such as the prohibition from hunting the same day
airborne were passed.
Often the pilots themselves have proposed regulations
to guide their use of Refuge lands. Today, the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge
has perhaps the best set of aircraft use and access regulations insuring wildlife
values and visitor experiences, while continuing the rich aviation tradition of
the Kenai Peninsula. For visitors seeking flights over or to destinations on the
Refuge, there are several permitted and reputable air services ready to meet most
flying needs. For more information on the flying history on the Kenai National
Wildlife Refuge, contact me or visit the Alaska Aviation Heritage museum on Lake
Hood.
Rick Johnston is a Ranger/Pilot at Kenai National Wildlife Refuge
and has been flying for the Refuge since 1985.
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