How good is the reliability of flights out of Stewart, BC?
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I expect to visit Stewart, British Columbia in March. I'll be traveling there with others via the airport at Terrace, BC, but need to leave for the US early. Ideally I'd like to avoid having to rent a second car and drive the 4 hours back to Terrace for the trip out of Stewart.
I notice that Taquan Air flies from Hyder, AK to Ketchikan on Mondays and Thursdays, and from there I can fly to Seattle. Monday works for me, but I have some lingering doubts about the wisdom of relying on this so I thought I would ask on the off chance someone has had experience with this flight or this airline.
My biggest concern is reliability. If they cancel my flight I definitely can't wait until Thursday, and it would also be bad if the scheduled 12:50 arrival in Ketchikan were delayed enough that I missed the 5:49 departure for Seattle. Since this is a small plane (it will be my first flight booking to ask for my body weight) and March weather won't necessarily be wonderful, I was wondering if anyone has a feel for the probability that this might not go well?
The other thing I was curious about is US immigration clearance (though I'll phone the airline and ask before booking in any case). I'll need to see the CBP somewhere, but that somewhere won't be the border crossing between Stewart and Hyder since it is unguarded in the Canada->US direction. Is there an opportunity to clear immigration at the Ketchikan end of the flight, or do I have to make some other arrangement?
air-travel usa canada
add a comment |
I expect to visit Stewart, British Columbia in March. I'll be traveling there with others via the airport at Terrace, BC, but need to leave for the US early. Ideally I'd like to avoid having to rent a second car and drive the 4 hours back to Terrace for the trip out of Stewart.
I notice that Taquan Air flies from Hyder, AK to Ketchikan on Mondays and Thursdays, and from there I can fly to Seattle. Monday works for me, but I have some lingering doubts about the wisdom of relying on this so I thought I would ask on the off chance someone has had experience with this flight or this airline.
My biggest concern is reliability. If they cancel my flight I definitely can't wait until Thursday, and it would also be bad if the scheduled 12:50 arrival in Ketchikan were delayed enough that I missed the 5:49 departure for Seattle. Since this is a small plane (it will be my first flight booking to ask for my body weight) and March weather won't necessarily be wonderful, I was wondering if anyone has a feel for the probability that this might not go well?
The other thing I was curious about is US immigration clearance (though I'll phone the airline and ask before booking in any case). I'll need to see the CBP somewhere, but that somewhere won't be the border crossing between Stewart and Hyder since it is unguarded in the Canada->US direction. Is there an opportunity to clear immigration at the Ketchikan end of the flight, or do I have to make some other arrangement?
air-travel usa canada
3
It's unguarded on the US side because there is nowhere else to go by ground but back to Canada. All flights from Hyder fly to the seaplane area of Ketchikan International Airport rather than the nearby Ketchikan Seaplane Base, and clear immigration and customs there. So as long as your flight isn't cancelled, you should make the connection. These flights are not on any of the usual flight tracker websites, so it might not be possible to conclusively answer that question.
– Michael Hampton
Feb 16 '16 at 0:44
add a comment |
I expect to visit Stewart, British Columbia in March. I'll be traveling there with others via the airport at Terrace, BC, but need to leave for the US early. Ideally I'd like to avoid having to rent a second car and drive the 4 hours back to Terrace for the trip out of Stewart.
I notice that Taquan Air flies from Hyder, AK to Ketchikan on Mondays and Thursdays, and from there I can fly to Seattle. Monday works for me, but I have some lingering doubts about the wisdom of relying on this so I thought I would ask on the off chance someone has had experience with this flight or this airline.
My biggest concern is reliability. If they cancel my flight I definitely can't wait until Thursday, and it would also be bad if the scheduled 12:50 arrival in Ketchikan were delayed enough that I missed the 5:49 departure for Seattle. Since this is a small plane (it will be my first flight booking to ask for my body weight) and March weather won't necessarily be wonderful, I was wondering if anyone has a feel for the probability that this might not go well?
The other thing I was curious about is US immigration clearance (though I'll phone the airline and ask before booking in any case). I'll need to see the CBP somewhere, but that somewhere won't be the border crossing between Stewart and Hyder since it is unguarded in the Canada->US direction. Is there an opportunity to clear immigration at the Ketchikan end of the flight, or do I have to make some other arrangement?
air-travel usa canada
I expect to visit Stewart, British Columbia in March. I'll be traveling there with others via the airport at Terrace, BC, but need to leave for the US early. Ideally I'd like to avoid having to rent a second car and drive the 4 hours back to Terrace for the trip out of Stewart.
I notice that Taquan Air flies from Hyder, AK to Ketchikan on Mondays and Thursdays, and from there I can fly to Seattle. Monday works for me, but I have some lingering doubts about the wisdom of relying on this so I thought I would ask on the off chance someone has had experience with this flight or this airline.
My biggest concern is reliability. If they cancel my flight I definitely can't wait until Thursday, and it would also be bad if the scheduled 12:50 arrival in Ketchikan were delayed enough that I missed the 5:49 departure for Seattle. Since this is a small plane (it will be my first flight booking to ask for my body weight) and March weather won't necessarily be wonderful, I was wondering if anyone has a feel for the probability that this might not go well?
The other thing I was curious about is US immigration clearance (though I'll phone the airline and ask before booking in any case). I'll need to see the CBP somewhere, but that somewhere won't be the border crossing between Stewart and Hyder since it is unguarded in the Canada->US direction. Is there an opportunity to clear immigration at the Ketchikan end of the flight, or do I have to make some other arrangement?
air-travel usa canada
air-travel usa canada
edited Jun 19 '16 at 10:34
JonathanReez♦
50.1k41239518
50.1k41239518
asked Feb 15 '16 at 21:58
DennisDennis
2,801713
2,801713
3
It's unguarded on the US side because there is nowhere else to go by ground but back to Canada. All flights from Hyder fly to the seaplane area of Ketchikan International Airport rather than the nearby Ketchikan Seaplane Base, and clear immigration and customs there. So as long as your flight isn't cancelled, you should make the connection. These flights are not on any of the usual flight tracker websites, so it might not be possible to conclusively answer that question.
– Michael Hampton
Feb 16 '16 at 0:44
add a comment |
3
It's unguarded on the US side because there is nowhere else to go by ground but back to Canada. All flights from Hyder fly to the seaplane area of Ketchikan International Airport rather than the nearby Ketchikan Seaplane Base, and clear immigration and customs there. So as long as your flight isn't cancelled, you should make the connection. These flights are not on any of the usual flight tracker websites, so it might not be possible to conclusively answer that question.
– Michael Hampton
Feb 16 '16 at 0:44
3
3
It's unguarded on the US side because there is nowhere else to go by ground but back to Canada. All flights from Hyder fly to the seaplane area of Ketchikan International Airport rather than the nearby Ketchikan Seaplane Base, and clear immigration and customs there. So as long as your flight isn't cancelled, you should make the connection. These flights are not on any of the usual flight tracker websites, so it might not be possible to conclusively answer that question.
– Michael Hampton
Feb 16 '16 at 0:44
It's unguarded on the US side because there is nowhere else to go by ground but back to Canada. All flights from Hyder fly to the seaplane area of Ketchikan International Airport rather than the nearby Ketchikan Seaplane Base, and clear immigration and customs there. So as long as your flight isn't cancelled, you should make the connection. These flights are not on any of the usual flight tracker websites, so it might not be possible to conclusively answer that question.
– Michael Hampton
Feb 16 '16 at 0:44
add a comment |
1 Answer
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I'm a long-time resident of the BC coast. I avoid travel by small plane in the winter for two reasons:
- Unpredictable weather means that any leg on a small plane is unreliable.
- Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
I took a look at Ketchikan weather averages, the terrain, and airport facilities. They are fairly similar to parts of the south coast of BC where my rule of thumb is 1 in 5 chance of cancellation during the winter. I would guess Ketchikan odds are similar. There's also a good chance that your plane will fly even if the weather is terrible. That would mean you'd make your connection albeit with a significant increased risk of death. That practice is common on this coast.
BC Weather and Small Planes
The main challenge for small planes operating in BC is visibility. Planes below a certain size aren't able to land safely in limited visibility. There are many regional airports and aircraft operated in BC that seem to be equipped to do some kind of instrument landing. My guess is KTN is so equipped but I'm fairly certain neither Stewart nor the planes that fly there are. This means that if visibility might become limited you probably shouldn't be flying in that plane.
The Vicious Roundtrip Dynamic
Suppose there is a harbour-to-harbour small-plane flight that is scheduled to leave Vancouver at 1030h for Comox and return to Vancouver at 1300h. At around 1015h the pilot has to predict if the weather will be good enough for the whole 2.5 hours to safely operate and land his plane. Visibility is generally not good in this part of the world in winter. Nor is it easy to predict. Pilots at smaller airlines often need flying hours both to pay rent and to advance their careers. The propensity is for a pilot to be optimistic about the weather. Suppose the plane lands in Comox and the weather has worsened. The pilot doesn't live there. There may not even be a safe spot to park the plane in bad weather. And the passengers in Comox all want to get to Vancouver. At that point there is enormous personal, business, and social pressure for the pilot to fly back to Vancouver regardless of the weather. Under that pressure a decision not to fly is unlikely even if weather has terribly deteriorated.
I have witnessed this vicious dynamic all over the BC coast. I don't see why it would be any different in Ketchikan, Hyder, and Stewart.
Small Planes Crash in BC Regularly
In the past 10 years 3 acquaintances of mine have died in small plane crashes and another two narrowly escaped with their lives in two separate crashes. I know first-hand of another three small-plane crashes that claimed another 12 or so lives. 4 of those 5 flights were commercial. Crashes seem to be so frequent that they are uninteresting. Like car accidents. I don't think they all make news but you can find reports of numerous recent plane crashes in BC.
This account is anecdotal. I haven't found any statistics about small-plane safety in BC in particular. There are, however, statistics about small planes in general. There is a good review of those statistics and how to understand them over on aviation.SE. After I read the answers by Geoff Dalgas and Voretaq7 I reflected on the BC weather and terrain and my encounters with small-plane pilots in BC. For me, at least, the conclusion was clear: Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
add a comment |
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I'm a long-time resident of the BC coast. I avoid travel by small plane in the winter for two reasons:
- Unpredictable weather means that any leg on a small plane is unreliable.
- Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
I took a look at Ketchikan weather averages, the terrain, and airport facilities. They are fairly similar to parts of the south coast of BC where my rule of thumb is 1 in 5 chance of cancellation during the winter. I would guess Ketchikan odds are similar. There's also a good chance that your plane will fly even if the weather is terrible. That would mean you'd make your connection albeit with a significant increased risk of death. That practice is common on this coast.
BC Weather and Small Planes
The main challenge for small planes operating in BC is visibility. Planes below a certain size aren't able to land safely in limited visibility. There are many regional airports and aircraft operated in BC that seem to be equipped to do some kind of instrument landing. My guess is KTN is so equipped but I'm fairly certain neither Stewart nor the planes that fly there are. This means that if visibility might become limited you probably shouldn't be flying in that plane.
The Vicious Roundtrip Dynamic
Suppose there is a harbour-to-harbour small-plane flight that is scheduled to leave Vancouver at 1030h for Comox and return to Vancouver at 1300h. At around 1015h the pilot has to predict if the weather will be good enough for the whole 2.5 hours to safely operate and land his plane. Visibility is generally not good in this part of the world in winter. Nor is it easy to predict. Pilots at smaller airlines often need flying hours both to pay rent and to advance their careers. The propensity is for a pilot to be optimistic about the weather. Suppose the plane lands in Comox and the weather has worsened. The pilot doesn't live there. There may not even be a safe spot to park the plane in bad weather. And the passengers in Comox all want to get to Vancouver. At that point there is enormous personal, business, and social pressure for the pilot to fly back to Vancouver regardless of the weather. Under that pressure a decision not to fly is unlikely even if weather has terribly deteriorated.
I have witnessed this vicious dynamic all over the BC coast. I don't see why it would be any different in Ketchikan, Hyder, and Stewart.
Small Planes Crash in BC Regularly
In the past 10 years 3 acquaintances of mine have died in small plane crashes and another two narrowly escaped with their lives in two separate crashes. I know first-hand of another three small-plane crashes that claimed another 12 or so lives. 4 of those 5 flights were commercial. Crashes seem to be so frequent that they are uninteresting. Like car accidents. I don't think they all make news but you can find reports of numerous recent plane crashes in BC.
This account is anecdotal. I haven't found any statistics about small-plane safety in BC in particular. There are, however, statistics about small planes in general. There is a good review of those statistics and how to understand them over on aviation.SE. After I read the answers by Geoff Dalgas and Voretaq7 I reflected on the BC weather and terrain and my encounters with small-plane pilots in BC. For me, at least, the conclusion was clear: Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
add a comment |
I'm a long-time resident of the BC coast. I avoid travel by small plane in the winter for two reasons:
- Unpredictable weather means that any leg on a small plane is unreliable.
- Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
I took a look at Ketchikan weather averages, the terrain, and airport facilities. They are fairly similar to parts of the south coast of BC where my rule of thumb is 1 in 5 chance of cancellation during the winter. I would guess Ketchikan odds are similar. There's also a good chance that your plane will fly even if the weather is terrible. That would mean you'd make your connection albeit with a significant increased risk of death. That practice is common on this coast.
BC Weather and Small Planes
The main challenge for small planes operating in BC is visibility. Planes below a certain size aren't able to land safely in limited visibility. There are many regional airports and aircraft operated in BC that seem to be equipped to do some kind of instrument landing. My guess is KTN is so equipped but I'm fairly certain neither Stewart nor the planes that fly there are. This means that if visibility might become limited you probably shouldn't be flying in that plane.
The Vicious Roundtrip Dynamic
Suppose there is a harbour-to-harbour small-plane flight that is scheduled to leave Vancouver at 1030h for Comox and return to Vancouver at 1300h. At around 1015h the pilot has to predict if the weather will be good enough for the whole 2.5 hours to safely operate and land his plane. Visibility is generally not good in this part of the world in winter. Nor is it easy to predict. Pilots at smaller airlines often need flying hours both to pay rent and to advance their careers. The propensity is for a pilot to be optimistic about the weather. Suppose the plane lands in Comox and the weather has worsened. The pilot doesn't live there. There may not even be a safe spot to park the plane in bad weather. And the passengers in Comox all want to get to Vancouver. At that point there is enormous personal, business, and social pressure for the pilot to fly back to Vancouver regardless of the weather. Under that pressure a decision not to fly is unlikely even if weather has terribly deteriorated.
I have witnessed this vicious dynamic all over the BC coast. I don't see why it would be any different in Ketchikan, Hyder, and Stewart.
Small Planes Crash in BC Regularly
In the past 10 years 3 acquaintances of mine have died in small plane crashes and another two narrowly escaped with their lives in two separate crashes. I know first-hand of another three small-plane crashes that claimed another 12 or so lives. 4 of those 5 flights were commercial. Crashes seem to be so frequent that they are uninteresting. Like car accidents. I don't think they all make news but you can find reports of numerous recent plane crashes in BC.
This account is anecdotal. I haven't found any statistics about small-plane safety in BC in particular. There are, however, statistics about small planes in general. There is a good review of those statistics and how to understand them over on aviation.SE. After I read the answers by Geoff Dalgas and Voretaq7 I reflected on the BC weather and terrain and my encounters with small-plane pilots in BC. For me, at least, the conclusion was clear: Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
add a comment |
I'm a long-time resident of the BC coast. I avoid travel by small plane in the winter for two reasons:
- Unpredictable weather means that any leg on a small plane is unreliable.
- Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
I took a look at Ketchikan weather averages, the terrain, and airport facilities. They are fairly similar to parts of the south coast of BC where my rule of thumb is 1 in 5 chance of cancellation during the winter. I would guess Ketchikan odds are similar. There's also a good chance that your plane will fly even if the weather is terrible. That would mean you'd make your connection albeit with a significant increased risk of death. That practice is common on this coast.
BC Weather and Small Planes
The main challenge for small planes operating in BC is visibility. Planes below a certain size aren't able to land safely in limited visibility. There are many regional airports and aircraft operated in BC that seem to be equipped to do some kind of instrument landing. My guess is KTN is so equipped but I'm fairly certain neither Stewart nor the planes that fly there are. This means that if visibility might become limited you probably shouldn't be flying in that plane.
The Vicious Roundtrip Dynamic
Suppose there is a harbour-to-harbour small-plane flight that is scheduled to leave Vancouver at 1030h for Comox and return to Vancouver at 1300h. At around 1015h the pilot has to predict if the weather will be good enough for the whole 2.5 hours to safely operate and land his plane. Visibility is generally not good in this part of the world in winter. Nor is it easy to predict. Pilots at smaller airlines often need flying hours both to pay rent and to advance their careers. The propensity is for a pilot to be optimistic about the weather. Suppose the plane lands in Comox and the weather has worsened. The pilot doesn't live there. There may not even be a safe spot to park the plane in bad weather. And the passengers in Comox all want to get to Vancouver. At that point there is enormous personal, business, and social pressure for the pilot to fly back to Vancouver regardless of the weather. Under that pressure a decision not to fly is unlikely even if weather has terribly deteriorated.
I have witnessed this vicious dynamic all over the BC coast. I don't see why it would be any different in Ketchikan, Hyder, and Stewart.
Small Planes Crash in BC Regularly
In the past 10 years 3 acquaintances of mine have died in small plane crashes and another two narrowly escaped with their lives in two separate crashes. I know first-hand of another three small-plane crashes that claimed another 12 or so lives. 4 of those 5 flights were commercial. Crashes seem to be so frequent that they are uninteresting. Like car accidents. I don't think they all make news but you can find reports of numerous recent plane crashes in BC.
This account is anecdotal. I haven't found any statistics about small-plane safety in BC in particular. There are, however, statistics about small planes in general. There is a good review of those statistics and how to understand them over on aviation.SE. After I read the answers by Geoff Dalgas and Voretaq7 I reflected on the BC weather and terrain and my encounters with small-plane pilots in BC. For me, at least, the conclusion was clear: Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
I'm a long-time resident of the BC coast. I avoid travel by small plane in the winter for two reasons:
- Unpredictable weather means that any leg on a small plane is unreliable.
- Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
I took a look at Ketchikan weather averages, the terrain, and airport facilities. They are fairly similar to parts of the south coast of BC where my rule of thumb is 1 in 5 chance of cancellation during the winter. I would guess Ketchikan odds are similar. There's also a good chance that your plane will fly even if the weather is terrible. That would mean you'd make your connection albeit with a significant increased risk of death. That practice is common on this coast.
BC Weather and Small Planes
The main challenge for small planes operating in BC is visibility. Planes below a certain size aren't able to land safely in limited visibility. There are many regional airports and aircraft operated in BC that seem to be equipped to do some kind of instrument landing. My guess is KTN is so equipped but I'm fairly certain neither Stewart nor the planes that fly there are. This means that if visibility might become limited you probably shouldn't be flying in that plane.
The Vicious Roundtrip Dynamic
Suppose there is a harbour-to-harbour small-plane flight that is scheduled to leave Vancouver at 1030h for Comox and return to Vancouver at 1300h. At around 1015h the pilot has to predict if the weather will be good enough for the whole 2.5 hours to safely operate and land his plane. Visibility is generally not good in this part of the world in winter. Nor is it easy to predict. Pilots at smaller airlines often need flying hours both to pay rent and to advance their careers. The propensity is for a pilot to be optimistic about the weather. Suppose the plane lands in Comox and the weather has worsened. The pilot doesn't live there. There may not even be a safe spot to park the plane in bad weather. And the passengers in Comox all want to get to Vancouver. At that point there is enormous personal, business, and social pressure for the pilot to fly back to Vancouver regardless of the weather. Under that pressure a decision not to fly is unlikely even if weather has terribly deteriorated.
I have witnessed this vicious dynamic all over the BC coast. I don't see why it would be any different in Ketchikan, Hyder, and Stewart.
Small Planes Crash in BC Regularly
In the past 10 years 3 acquaintances of mine have died in small plane crashes and another two narrowly escaped with their lives in two separate crashes. I know first-hand of another three small-plane crashes that claimed another 12 or so lives. 4 of those 5 flights were commercial. Crashes seem to be so frequent that they are uninteresting. Like car accidents. I don't think they all make news but you can find reports of numerous recent plane crashes in BC.
This account is anecdotal. I haven't found any statistics about small-plane safety in BC in particular. There are, however, statistics about small planes in general. There is a good review of those statistics and how to understand them over on aviation.SE. After I read the answers by Geoff Dalgas and Voretaq7 I reflected on the BC weather and terrain and my encounters with small-plane pilots in BC. For me, at least, the conclusion was clear: Flying in small planes in BC is not worth the risk to my life.
edited Apr 13 '17 at 13:00
Community♦
1
1
answered Jul 19 '16 at 5:16
alx9ralx9r
2,87121632
2,87121632
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
add a comment |
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
Why is the safety record in BC so terrible? There's plenty of small planes flying around in northern Norway and the last time any crashed was in 1993, and I thought Northern Norway should have a similar climate to southwestern BC.
– gerrit
Jan 16 at 14:00
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
@gerrit That reference doesn't tell us much since the accident history only considers one airline whose smallest plane is currently a dash 8. It could easily be that that airline hasn't flown smaller planes since 1993. It would be interesting to see a comparison of some real safety statistics for small planes between scandinavia and BC. The last time I looked into it, though, such statistics didn't seem to be easily available for BC.
– alx9r
Jan 16 at 20:15
add a comment |
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3
It's unguarded on the US side because there is nowhere else to go by ground but back to Canada. All flights from Hyder fly to the seaplane area of Ketchikan International Airport rather than the nearby Ketchikan Seaplane Base, and clear immigration and customs there. So as long as your flight isn't cancelled, you should make the connection. These flights are not on any of the usual flight tracker websites, so it might not be possible to conclusively answer that question.
– Michael Hampton
Feb 16 '16 at 0:44