AlaskaBushPilot
Illuminator
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2010
- Messages
- 4,341
Yeah Shrike - glad you know the area. So I gather your thesis was on bigfoot food sources in the Pine Creek Gorge. 
Right Drewbot. They do the animal counts in a lot of states with supercubs and of course the big game hunting guides use them to get people to the most remote hunting sites. This is a supercub Jodie:
I totaled that one in the Alaska Range when I was moose hunting with my brother, but I got an even better one now. This shot is from where the George Glacier meets the Kniik Glacier. The only way in is by supercub. I'm usually a lot grubbier than this, but I dressed up for the camera.
These planes fly at about 38 mph with the mods I got on them, so if you are flying into the wind you're basically standing still. Nothing can hide from you Jodie. Once the foliage comes down and there is any kind of snow, you can track anything that moves from the air. With those tires I can land on rocks as bit as mailboxes and I have plenty of pictures to demonstrate that. When you said it costs someone a lot of money and you have to go to a lot of effort to get to the most remote places in the United States - that would be me. There aren't any bigfoot in these places, but there are a lot of bears and wolves and such.
Right Drewbot. They do the animal counts in a lot of states with supercubs and of course the big game hunting guides use them to get people to the most remote hunting sites. This is a supercub Jodie:
I totaled that one in the Alaska Range when I was moose hunting with my brother, but I got an even better one now. This shot is from where the George Glacier meets the Kniik Glacier. The only way in is by supercub. I'm usually a lot grubbier than this, but I dressed up for the camera.
These planes fly at about 38 mph with the mods I got on them, so if you are flying into the wind you're basically standing still. Nothing can hide from you Jodie. Once the foliage comes down and there is any kind of snow, you can track anything that moves from the air. With those tires I can land on rocks as bit as mailboxes and I have plenty of pictures to demonstrate that. When you said it costs someone a lot of money and you have to go to a lot of effort to get to the most remote places in the United States - that would be me. There aren't any bigfoot in these places, but there are a lot of bears and wolves and such.