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#11
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"Gary" wrote in
: The guy complaining about the next door airport got me thinking more about a question that's been rolling around in my head for some time. I'm not a pilot (yet), don't own a plane, or even any significant land, but I've kind of wondered..... If I owned enough land somewhere "could" I just land my plane on an appropriate surface? or would it have to be a registered airport? Would it matter if it was an Ultralight, or an "N" registered plane?? What are the rules (federal) that govern this? or is it a state by state thing (I'm in Texas if it really matters). I know I here of planes in Alaska that land on a local road, pull up to the rural gas station to fill up, and take off again (or is that an Urban Legend?) In Texas, you supposedly need Texas Parks & Wildlife Dept permission to land a seaplane on a lake. At a couple of remote airports, I've taxied off airport property down to a nearby gas station for fuel, having no idea if it was legal. That's another question I had running around in my head for several years... Didn't want to ask both at once... thanks for adding that. -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
#12
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Kyler Laird wrote in
: http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...h=4a632a77d0d9 09f3&seekm=3A076F6D.F9C1E595%40netscape.net http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...h=451752da8c9c 2573&seekm=rq0hfvs44c0qu23fj67p23ot0n1v3rp204%404a x.com&frame=off --kyler All responses have been helpfull and interesting... Thanks for the links to old threads, I normally am a faithfull "google first" person.. but for this one, I couldn't think of a good combination of search terms that would not yeild a million hits that are not relevent. -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
#13
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Marty Shapiro writes:
CAUTION: The runway is an automobile highway. Call on 122.8 and ask Chico Hot Springs to block the road. Land on 15; depart on 33. I recall one or two places like that in our fly-in restaurant guide. The notes are similar. ("Call and we'll stop traffic.") I suspect it was common back before airports were. --kyler |
#14
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I know of at least one place in Kansas where you can land, taxi to the
gas station, get gas and taxi back to the field. Another place that you taxi off the runway onto the road, stop at the stop sign, pull into the parking lot, have lunch, crank back up, taxi down the road, stop at the stop sign then back to the field to take off. There is no rule that airports need to be registered with the Feds. I have operated many times from non-airport fields. Never in anything bigger than a 4 seat plane, though. If you're worried about insurance issues it becomes an entirely different matter. In article , ET wrote: The guy complaining about the next door airport got me thinking more about a question that's been rolling around in my head for some time. I'm not a pilot (yet), don't own a plane, or even any significant land, but I've kind of wondered..... If I owned enough land somewhere "could" I just land my plane on an appropriate surface? or would it have to be a registered airport? Would it matter if it was an Ultralight, or an "N" registered plane?? What are the rules (federal) that govern this? or is it a state by state thing (I'm in Texas if it really matters). I know I here of planes in Alaska that land on a local road, pull up to the rural gas station to fill up, and take off again (or is that an Urban Legend?) |
#15
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In article t, d b
wrote: Another place that you taxi off the runway onto the road, stop at the stop sign, pull into the parking lot, have lunch, crank back up, taxi down the road, stop at the stop sign then back to the field to take off. NOTE: HIgh wing aircraft only. Low wingers must walk. |
#16
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![]() Newfound Valley 2N2 in Bristol NH carries the notation: "used as pvt road look for vehicles" in the AOPA Airport Directory. On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 20:58:00 -0000, Marty Shapiro wrote: ET wrote in : The guy complaining about the next door airport got me thinking more about a question that's been rolling around in my head for some time. I'm not a pilot (yet), don't own a plane, or even any significant land, but I've kind of wondered..... If I owned enough land somewhere "could" I just land my plane on an appropriate surface? or would it have to be a registered airport? Would it matter if it was an Ultralight, or an "N" registered plane?? What are the rules (federal) that govern this? or is it a state by state thing (I'm in Texas if it really matters). I know I here of planes in Alaska that land on a local road, pull up to the rural gas station to fill up, and take off again (or is that an Urban Legend?) I have a copy of the Flyer's Recreation Guide from 1993. It has a description of Chico Hot Springs, an uncharted "airport" in the town of Pray, Idaho. Coord: N-45-21.5, W-110-37.5 Elev: 5200 feet RWay: 15/33 5000 x 35' asphalt Freq: CTAF-122.8 Chart: (not charted) CAUTION: The runway is an automobile highway. Call on 122.8 and ask Chico Hot Springs to block the road. Land on 15; depart on 33. "The airport is a county highway that doubles as a runway. .. Call Chico in advance at 406-333-4933 to alert them of your arrival. As them to verify that their radio is on and the volume is up. When you arrive, circle the runway and contact Chico Hot Springs on 122.8 Wait until they block the road, as required by the county sheriff." I've never been to Chico Hot Springs, so this is the only information I have about it. all the best -- Dan Ford email: see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#17
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EDR wrote in message ...
snip In Alaska, as you drive down a two lane road, you may see signs that state "AIRCRAFT HAVE RIGHT OF WAY ON ROAD". In Alaska I landed on the Dalton highway (actually a 2 lane gravel road) a few times to go camping. The locals didn't bat an eye, but the tourists thought I was some kind of lunatic. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#18
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#19
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ET wrote in message .. .
The guy complaining about the next door airport got me thinking more about a question that's been rolling around in my head for some time. I'm not a pilot (yet), don't own a plane, or even any significant land, but I've kind of wondered..... If I owned enough land somewhere "could" I just land my plane on an appropriate surface? or would it have to be a registered airport? Would it matter if it was an Ultralight, or an "N" registered plane?? What are the rules (federal) that govern this? or is it a state by state thing (I'm in Texas if it really matters). In Texas you may land on your private airstrip or your otherwise wide-and-long-enough patch of land and don't even have to officially register it as a private airport, but you can register it as such if you want it published. You can also land and take-off on any road that's not a federal highway (US numbered or Interstate) as long as you do not create a hazard to yourself or any ground traffic when doing so and as long as there are no local county or city ordinances enacted against doing so. However, the determination of whether or not you are not creating a hazard is solely up to the discretion of any law enforcement officer who might witness your doing so. So if you want to land your Cub on some farm road in rural Bumfork County, TX and taxi up to cousin Andy's house and park in his front yard, you can generally do so as long as Deputy Barney doesn't get his knickers in a wad over the deal. |
#20
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