Canadian Rockies: Airplane Camping & Aerial Photography Sept 2011

Category: British Columbia & Alberta
Date: Sept 19-24, 2011Trip Report #: 106Partner/Friend/Pilot: John Scurlock

Aerial Photography Trip Report

(with John Scurlock)

Robson, Sir Alexander, Ida, Tonquin Valley, Hooker, Alberta, Columbia, Tsar, Gimli and Valhallas, Bugaboos, Assiniboine, and more...

Intro

When pilot and aerial photographer John Scurlock asked if I was interested in joining him on a trip above the Canadian Rockies*, I couldn't believe my ears. I have spent countless hours of my life trekking through the mountains, but being above them is an indescribably amazing experience (as I've discovered on some aerial photography flights over the North Cascades with John). Having climbed in Canada on a few occasions (Bugaboos and Valhallas and Yoho NP), I definitely have the Canadian Rockies on my list of places to do some more exploration and climbing, so flying over them would be a great way to stoke my interest in these massive mountains. What an opportunity!

The weather is notoriously crappy as fall approaches the Rockies. So we figured we would take what we could get. As John said in one of his last emails before we left: "be flexible but nimble, take what the weather gives and don't get greedy." I figured if all we did was fly to some mountain town and spend a few days in the airport hangar listening to the pattering of rain on the roof, it would be worth the adventure. Seeing some mountains would be a bonus. A fresh dusting of snow to make them look even prettier....well, there I go getting greedy already.

In the end, even my greediest expectations couldn't have envisioned how spectacular this trip would be. The flying conditions were great, the mountains basked in the late summer light, and the trip in general was just so unique and epic that at times it was hard to believe that we were swooping at eye-level past snow-dusted monoliths of the remote Canadian Rockies*. And not just one or two, but hundreds. Over the course of a week and a total of 16 hours in the air, we traveled from Mt. Robson and the northern Rockies in Kakwa Provincial Park down along the west side of Jasper National Park, visiting the Tonquin Valley, the Hooker, Clemenceau, and Columbia Icefields, and then flew around the Valhallas, the Bugaboos, and Mt. Assiniboine. Try to do all that in a single climbing trip.

The following page has my trip notes, map overlays of our flights, and a selection of my favorite photographs. I am sure John will be putting some of his photos on his website as well: http://www.pbase.com/nolock.

Thanks John for this amazing opportunity. It's nice to have friends in high places!

itinerary, Map, stats, Trip Notes

MAPS
Our aerial travels:(using actual GPS data points from a portable GPS recorder set on a 2 second interval)


Example flight line from Mt. Robson flight:(using actual GPS data points from a portable GPS recorder set on a 2 second interval)(red markers represent photo locations)


FLIGHT STATS
Flight legs:(as numbered on map; aerial photography flight legs in bold, traveling flight legs not bold)
• Sept 19(i)  Concrete-Penticton: 122mi, 50min(ii) Penticton-Valemount: 242mi, 1h30min(#1)   Robson: 175mi, 1h20min
• Sept 20(#2)   Robson, Kakwa: 301mi, 2h(#3)   West side of Jasper NP (Valemount-Invermere): 400mi, 2h30min
• Sept 23(#4)   Clouds (Invermere-Nelson): 267mi, 2h15min(#5)   Mt. Gimli and Valhallas: 136mi, 1h
• Sept 24(#6)   Bugaboos, Mt. Assiniboine: 339mi, 2h45min(iii)    Nelson-Oroville: 114mi, 45min(iv)    Oroville-Concrete: 119mi, 50min
Totals:• Flight miles: 2,215 miles• Flight hours: ~16 hours
Gas:• Total gas burned: ~419 L (111 gal)• Price: $1.76-1.89/L ($6.65-7.14/gal)• Total gas cost: $755• Average gas mileage: ~20 mpg
Misc:• Typical flight speed: 100-200 mph• Typical flight elev: 2,000-14,000 ft



AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY OBJECTIVES
Mountains, elev.:• Mt. Robson, BC: 12,989 ft• Mt. Sir Alexander, Kakwa, BC: 10,745 ft• Mt. Ida, Kakwa, BC: 10,499 ft• Tonquin Valley, Jasper NP, BC/AB: 10,800+ ft• Mt. Hooker, BC/AB: 10,784 ft• Mt. Alberta, AB: 11,873 ft• Mt. Columbia, BC/AB: 12,274 ft• Tsar Mountain, BC: 11,211 ft• Mt. Gimli, Valhallas, BC: 9,206 ft• Bugaboo Spire, Bugaboos, BC: 10,512 ft• South Howser Tower, Bugaboos, BC: 11,037 ft• Mt. Assiniboine, BC/AB: 11,864 ft


TOWNS EN ROUTE
Populations:(census data ranging from 2006-2009; also, many of these areas host thousands more people during peak tourist seasons)
• Concrete, WA (start/end): 705• Penticton, BC (BC port of entry): 37,721• Valemount, BC: 1,018• Invermere, BC: 3,002• Nelson, BC: 9,258• Oroville, WA (WA port of entry): 1,686
ITINERARY / TRIP NOTES

Day 1 - Sept 19

Aerial Photography Flight #1: Mt. Robson in fresh snow dusting and evening light.

Day 2 - Sept 20

Aerial Photography Flight #2: Mt. Robson and Kakwa Provincial Park in morning light.Aerial Photography Flight #3: Canadian Rockies along the west side of Jasper National Park.

Day 3 - Sept 21

Day 4 - Sept 22

Day 5 - Sept 23

Aerial Photography Flight #4: Clouds.Aerial Photography Flight #5: Mt. Gimli and Valhallas in evening light.

Day 6 - Sept 24

Aerial Photography Flight #6: Bugaboos and Mt. Assiniboine in morning light.

Selected Photographs

If the content appears to be truncated here, you may need to put your cursor in the region above the blue line and scroll down to see more!
Wow. Thanks John for sharing your aerial world with me. Go to my Aerial photography page to see more awesome aerial adventures with John.

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