Times Colonist

Province provides $250,000 to preserve Martin Mars at North Saanich museum

- DARRON KLOSTER — with a file from Michael John Lo dkloster@timescolon­ist.com

The final flight of the Hawaii Martin Mars water bomber is getting a $250,000 boost from the provincial government as the iconic firefighti­ng aircraft travels from Sproat Lake to the B.C. Aviation Museum in North Saanich.

Officials on Thursday confirmed a plan that would see the massive aircraft operationa­l by the end of the year so that it can be moved to the museum.

The one-time funding from the provincial government to the museum will help establish the aircraft as the centrepiec­e of its new B.C. wildfire aviation exhibit.

Lana Popham, minister of tourism, arts, culture and sport, called the aircraft a proud symbol of B.C.’s ingenuity and innovation, representi­ng cutting-edge technology in aviation firefighti­ng of its time.

“We recognize the value the Hawaii Martin Mars water bomber holds for many people and have heard their desire to have it housed in the British Columbia Aviation Museum, where it can be displayed and protected as an important piece of our province’s history,” she said at a press conference at Coulson Aviation’s air tanker base at Sproat Lake.

The water bomber, with its 200-feet wingspan, was last active fighting fires in 2015 and was operationa­l on Vancouver Island for more than a half century, able to drop 6,000 gallons of water on fires in a single pass.

Its final flight is expected this fall and will be a multi-phased process that includes passing federal inspection­s, crew training and test flights.

Hawaii Martin Mars can land and take off only on water, so its last flight will be from Sproat Lake to the Saanich Inlet near Victoria Internatio­nal Airport.

The plane is expected to travel across Campbell River, eastern Island communitie­s, as well as the Gulf Islands during its final flight.

The aircraft will be brought up on a ramp at Canadian Coast Guard Base Patricia Bay, a former seaplane port, mounted on a trailer in a swivelling cradle made by Nickel Bros. and transporte­d across Victoria Internatio­nal Airport runways, a process that’s expected to take a week to complete.

Security fences and wires will have to be temporaril­y dismantled to accommodat­e the move.

The flight plan is expected to be heavily publicized so people along the route will be able to see the plane fly one last time.

The museum is raising funds to build a new hangar to house Martin Mars Hawaii and landbased B.C. firefighti­ng aircraft donated by the Victoria Airport Authority.

The new exhibit will be interactiv­e, inviting visitors to explore the features of the aircraft up close.

The plan is to build a glass-walled hangar south of their current two hangars so that people landing and flying out of Victoria Internatio­nal Airport will be able to catch a glimpse of the Martin Mars bomber.

A sign has already gone up at the new hangar location.

It’s expected to be one of the largest aviation museum hangars in Western Canada when built.

The Hawaii is one of only two Martin Mars water bombers left. The other, Philippine Mars, was retired in 2012 and is not considered airworthy. It remains at the Coulson air base.

Coulson Aviation will enlist five former certified maintenanc­e engineers and four flight crew to complete about 10,000 hours of aircraft preparatio­n and flight retraining over the next six months to prepare the red-and-white Hawaii Martin Mars for its last flight.

Wayne Coulson, CEO of the Coulson Group of companies, did not attend the press conference, but said in a statement he was pleased to partner with the museum in the “important endeavour” to preserve the plane.

“The Hawaii Martin Mars water bomber is an amazing aircraft,” Coulson said. “After this flight, you will probably never see one fly again.”

Steve Nichol, president of the B.C. Aviation Museum, said the project to acquire the water bomber started more than two years ago.

“I am overjoyed at the prospect of not only preserving this vintage aircraft, but to be able to showcase its fascinatin­g history as a B.C. aviation story,” Nichol said.

The museum attracts about 20,000 visitors a year, and having the water bomber is an opportunit­y to raise the profile of British Columbia’s aviation history.

Richard Mosdell, the project lead in getting the bomber for the museum, said he’s been overwhelme­d with the support.

“There are so many people on the Island with Mars DNA. … They’ve worked on the planes, flown them, seen them and just love them,” Mosdell said. “They’re coming up to me and shaking my hand, saying thank you for not letting this plane leave the Island.”

Only seven Martin Mars were made by the California-based Glenn L. Martin Company, all for the U.S. Navy as ocean patrol and long-range transports during the Second World War. Most were used for naval cargo in the Pacific.

Hawaii Martin Mars was also enlisted as the largest air ambulance during the Korean War until it was converted in 1958.

The last four planes, sold as scrap, were bought by a B.C. forestry consortium and later converted to water bombers. One Mars crashed while firefighti­ng near Nanoose Bay in 1961, with the loss of four crew. Another was critically damaged in a storm.

The remaining two Martin Mars bombers were acquired by the Coulson Group in 2007 from Timberwest and its subsidiary, Forest Industrial Flying Tankers.

 ?? COULSON GROUP ?? Hawaii Martin Mars fights a forest fire in northern California, near Shasta Lake, in July 2008. The water bomber will make one last flight from Sproat Lake to North Saanich as it retires.
COULSON GROUP Hawaii Martin Mars fights a forest fire in northern California, near Shasta Lake, in July 2008. The water bomber will make one last flight from Sproat Lake to North Saanich as it retires.

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