Strip? Landing?
Landing strip, obvious, innit.
A Canadian microlight pilot is set to go down in aviation history after landing in the parking lot of a strip joint in Carignan, southeast of Montreal, popping in for a quick break and then flying off. Local cops got a 911 call from a concerned citizen who thought the aircraft had crashed outside the Le Rendez-Vous last …
In this circumstance, too much flap is likely to cause a stall; noticeable by a flacid joystick, loss of feedback and inability to hit the correct final approach.
In this circumstance, the pilot is recommended to abort, circle round and attempt landing at an alternative runway, if one is available. Note: At some airstrips, this runway may be much narrower and shorter, requiring ideal landing conditions, very precise joystick control and a much slower final approach.
Most aviation authorities have a different definition of "public place" than the generic. In this particular case, they almost certainly mean any place that isn't a designated airstrip or a private area restricted from public access, such as a very long private driveway in the country (a feasible strip for many ultralights). Depending on the jurisdiction, an ultralight pilot may not even be allowed to fly over more urbanized areas. It's all about having a few hundred pounds of plane and pilot drop on someone's head - especially when licensing for ultralights is dirt simple to get (or not even necessary - again, depending on the jurisdiction).
-d
As the pilot approached that club from above he began to feel a slight stiffness in his control..err...umm...joystick. For safety reasons he had to make an immediate landing to have the 'problem' attended to. Yeah, that's it...for safety reasons. I'm sure his flight home was relaxed with a nice soft landing.
-Paris is crying because she couldn't be there to work out the stiffness herself.
Indeed they probably do mean "public place" as in "A place to which the public has access" as opposed to "public property". If you wouldn't be allowed to run around naked in it under indecent exposure laws then you probably can't land there, ahem.
Anyone else envisioning a private landing strip (snigger snigger) positioned next to a strip club? Bonus points if they can make the club itself out of two domes...
Ok it's been a few years, but when I took a full pilot licence we were taught facts slightly different to those quoted in the article.
"Eight hours from bottle to throttle" was a guide only. The rule is that you can't enter the flightdeck or cockpit (yeah yeah) while affected by alcohol. This stems back from IATA rules of 1948. If you read the rules literally, you are/were legally on safe ground if you took the controls stone sober but drinking a bottle of whisky while taking off! :)
Commercial pilots (ATPL), however, are ALSO governed by airline regulations, and they seem to be very strict regarding alcohol consumption, particularly while flying. Since I don't know of any ultra lights flying scheduled flights with passengers, I assume this not to be an issue in this case.
If the pilot in questions was under normal pilot licensing rules, he is guaranteed to have broken a number of rules. You have to be 500ft away from vehicles or persons unless during take-off and landing on designated airstrips or airports. Also, you have to keep a certain distance from any large gathering of people (Don't know how popular the club in question is).