The Scotsman

Vintage planes make epic flight from Wick to Canada

● Arctic journey takes crews back to early days of flying

- By DOM SMITH

0 The three vintage planes on a stop-over in the remote Canadian airfield of Qikiqtarju­aq, inside the Arctic Circle Three vintage aircraft have undertaken a British-led tenday voyage from Scotland to Canada via the Arctic Circle.

The planes – a 65-year-old Beech 18, a homemade kitbuilt Van’s RV8 and a 1980 Saratoga – set out from Wick on 20 June and spent ten days flying across the Arctic via Iceland and Greenland.

The spectacula­r trip was organised by aircraft enthusiast­s Vintage Air Rally and captured on film by acclaimed

LOCHABER

photo-journalist Timothy Allen, best known for his work on the BBC series The Human Planet.

Allen said: “At times what I was witnessing didn’t register as real. I was looking out the plane window at vintage aeroplanes flying over the most spectacula­r scenery in some of the most remote points of the planet.

“It was astonishin­g and exhilarati­ng. It’s a real privilege to see that first hand.”

The planes started their journey in Wick and flew up to four or five hours a day, making overnight stops on often remote airstrips in Iceland, Greenland and Canada.

Flying in such inhospitab­le skies in such small aircraft also held its dangers. “It was scary as well,” Allen, 46, said. “I was on edge a lot of the time.

“Two of the aeroplanes were single engine, so when you flew over any large stretches of water we had to wear immersion suits, just in case the engine stops.

“Because if the engine does stop, the only way is down. And if you don’t have an immersion suit on you’d die within five minutes in that water. An immersion suit gives you an extra 45 minutes inwhichtim­eyoumighth­opefully find a life raft.

“The fact that we had to fly in immersion suits – like you might wear for deep sea diving – shows you the kind of risks we were taking. We had to have a lot of trust in the machinery.”

The team also had to watch out for the potentiall­y lethal process of icing – where the Arctic temperatur­es cause ice to start forming on the outside of the plane or the engine.

“That’s a real problem when flying in the Arctic,” Allen said.

“It’s the one thing that everyone was very scared of. If you notice icing starting to appear on the wings then you have to drop down in altitude to where temperatur­es are higher.”

Sam Rutherford, who piloted the Saratoga, said: “The aim is to demonstrat­e that even decades after constructi­on, these old aircraft are still capable of achieving difficult and demanding routes.”

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