Street Scene In Petropavlovsk
(Image from May 22, 1999 - Diary Entry)
Charlie Coming On To The Ice
(Image from June 13, 1998 - Diary Entry)
Charlie by his Kolb
Aircraft
(Image from June 13, 1998 - Diary Entry)
Elevators of the plane
(Image from August 17, 1999 - Diary Entry)
(Click on any Image to see a higher resolution version)
Please Note:
These images are all from previous entries due to the breakage of the
digital camera. New images will be arriving hopefully with the next entry.
Click
here to here about the digital camera mishap.
|
|
My stay in Petropavlovsk has been frustrating as usual.
The plan was that I would go to our cabin for a week and come back to Petropavlovsk
to make the final arrangements for our summer at our new place with the
cubs. This is what I was told before I went south.
The real frustration has been with these two orphaned cubs which I was
told about several weeks ago. They were alleged to be at a hunter's camp
a few hundred miles to the north near the town of Ust Kamchatsk at the
mouth of the Kamchatka River. I wanted to go get them instead of going
to Kambalnoe Lake but was told that everything would be taken care of
and they would be in Petropavlovsk in a week. When I got back, I was told
that they had been accidentally killed by dogs while in transport. I blamed
myself for not going to get them as was my first inclination because I
realize it would be impossible for anyone to understand how precious their
cargo was.
Later, I was told that these were not the same cubs that were killed
but a different set in another town. The original cubs are supposed to
be still alive far out in a hunting camp. I said "great, lets go get them"
but was told that it could be a rumor and we could spend a couple thousand
dollars for nothing. That is where I stand, vacillating between thinking
the whole thing was a fabrication from the first to believing that they
were killed and I was told they were different because of the embarrassment
of it.
Today, I hear that they are still alive and well. Such are the delights
of working here. I am quite convinced that there are no cubs which is
ironic because there have been cubs every year since we came to Russia
in 1994. By changing our location to continue our study this is the first
year we have official permission to take orphans and there are none. There
were five available last year. The year we finally just took Chico, Biscuit
and Rosie, we were refused permission at the last minute.
I have had plenty of work to do to get my Kolb aircraft ready for another
season of flying. A year ago, in July, I had a small accident while landing
on a snowdrift. It was a case of not looking close enough first and realizing
once I was on the snow that it was far from level, sloped down in the
direction I was landing and also to the right. I compounded the problem
by not immediately putting on power and taking off again but instead decided
to ground loop which is to spin around while keeping the wings level by
adding power and using opposite aileron and lots of rudder. When I attempted
this my float caught on something and it flipped me back in the direction
I had been headed in the first place which was into a rock pile. I quickly
tried again and managed to at least get siding sideways and slowed up
a bit before getting to the rocks. I knocked the sponson off which is
the small balancing float at the end of each wing and when the wing dipped
into a rock it buckled the outside rib in one place and broke two of the
braces attaching the wingtip bow which rounds out the end of the wing.
After assessing the problem, I decided that there was plenty of strength
left in the area to allow me to keep flying after easily putting the sponson
back on. Thankfully, this plane is designed to be very strong. I did not
write about it at the time because I didn't want people to worry (or think
I am totally crazy). Instead of repairing the wing last summer, I decided
to rebuild the elevators because there was some loosening of the rivets
from being buffeted by the wind on the ground which had a far greater
possibility for repercussions.
Last week, with the help of my friends who run the flying school here,
I stripped the fabric off the end of the wing and rebuilt the aluminum
components, recovered it including paint and flew for a couple hours to
get the feel back before heading into the boonies.
Maureen is to arrive in a couple days with another digital camera. She
sounds very tired from organizing everything to get ready to leave, finishing
a sculpture commission she was working on, discussing details with my
brother Gordon who will hire a crew to build the coral and small barn
we are building at my family ranch, plus preparing for her September show
in Moscow. Maureen and maybe I, will go to Moscow from here to attend
the opening of Maureen's exhibition and then return to the camp and then
in early October we will head back to Canada.
Our current plans are to first go back to our cabin at Kambalnoe Lake
to live with Chico, Biscuit, Brandy and her cubs(Gin & Tonic) who
will probably be weaned by the time we get there. Brandy is due to be
bred again this year but perhaps will keep her Gin and Tonic around for
another year. I will commute with my plane to the other place to work
on the cabin there. Tatiana Gordienko will come and go as she works on
her thesis.
We still have to get our official permission from the preserve to again
stay in our cabin which is OK as long as we don't work with any new orphans
there. The director of the preserve who is the only person who can sign
our documents is ill but he suspects he will be back in the office the
day after Maureen gets here. I hope so because I want to get out of this
town.
- Charlie
|