Page 71 - World Airnews Magazine November 2020
P. 71

FEATURE

          rangers to investigate. His team will also drop rangers off in places   Within his small team, safety depends on something simple yet
          that are otherwise inaccessible, such as islands in the swamp   fundamental: making sure everyone knows what’s going on.
          region.                                              When the office knows all the details for the day, including
                                                              when to expect pilots back, they can watch for the helicopters on
          NO ROADS, NO CELLPHONES, NO AIRCRAFT CONTROL        Spidertracks.
          For the most part, the Zambezi Delta is flat and forgiving, with   “Being so remote and not flying out of an airport, we’ve got to
          its highest point at 100 feet above sea level. A third of the area   make sure that we report to the office every single day. Otherwise,
          is delta, a mix of grasslands, savannas, and swamp forests that   it could leave us in a lurch,” Mark said.
          remain dry nine months of the year.
           The rest of the land is wooded, with mahogany trees that stand   PRESERVING AN ECOSYSTEM
          upwards of 50 feet.                                 Although COVID-19 has slowed down tourism, Mark has big plans
           “Those areas of the ones we have to be aware of because if a   for the future of Wildlife Helicopters.
          chopper went in there, there’s no way to land. The canopy would   Wildlife Helicopters will begin to shadow Mozambique’s primary
          simply swallow you up,” Mark said.                  veterinarian - a wildlife vet. Pilots will once again act as an eye in
           100 miles north of Beira, and without much of a road network,   the sky to make sure Mozambique’s wildlife continues to thrive.
          Wildlife Helicopters is base is very remote.         Mark also acquired another block of land northwest, where
           “There’s no real living there,” Mark said, “Just one main road and   Mozambique shares a border with Zambia. It’s home to lions and
          then a couple of dirt tracks here and there, so helicopters pretty   elephants, although both populations are at risk of dwindling
          much help you get around.”                          further.
                                                               He said that there is a future plan for them to work on
          OUTSIDE OF CONTROLLED AIR SPACE                     anti-poaching with Rhino in Southern Mozambique, where their
          “There’s no cellphone communication or anything, so we rely on   horns cost upwards for (US) $250,000. South Africa is losing around
                                                              two rhinos a day from poaching - Mark would like to replicate his
          Spidertracks pretty heavily to know everyone’s safe and sound,   work in the Zambezi Delta to increase the area’s rhino population.
          and where they are at any given time.”
           Mark recognises that it’s easier for pilots to start to neglect the   “They are only just on the right side of the curve. Rhinos are
          basics of safety and to ‘cowboy up there’ outside of controlled   breeding slightly faster than they are poached, but it’s becoming
          airspace.                                           pretty close,” Mark said.
           “Pilots feel like because they are running these smaller aircraft   Thanks to a remote Mozambique base, Wildlife Helicopters can
          that the safety rules don’t apply to them and they can fly ad hoc   continue to serve a large area and assist in a range of conservation
          and do whatever. What we’ve tried to do is make sure we have a   efforts. In a place where aviation plays a crucial role in conser-
          formal protocol for how everyone flies,” he says.   vation, Wildlife Helicopters is helping to keep animals safe with
                                                              their Spidertracks. To make sure their pilots stay safe, they’ve got
           During the low season, there is often only one pilot at camp.   Spidertracks. Q

                  NEWS



                                   HE , WHO CIRCUMNAVIGATED THE

                                   GLOBE IN HELOS, DIES



                                            for air combat. After his service, he joined
                                            IBM in 1967 to sell computers but in 1982   and ended on less than three weeks later
         Joe Ronald ‘Ron’ Bower, who set two   jumped back into aviation when he joined   on September 3, averaging 10.2 hours a
          speed records circumnavigating the earth   a fellow IBM colleague to help launch an   day, with the longest day reaching 17.5
                                                                               hours. The total distance traversed was
          in helicopters, died on October 12. He was   aircraft sales company. There, he built a   20,508 nm and he logged a high of 2,263
          78.                               team of mechanics, pilots, salespeople,   nm in one day.
           Born on Dec. 28, 1941, Bower had   and administrators to support the sales   Bower is survived by his wife of 57
          amassed more than 9,000 hours over his 55   business, as well as establish a database of   years, Peggy, along with his children, their
          years of flying and obtained nearly every   Bell 206 records.        spouses, grandchildren, and a great-grand-
          aircraft rating, except for blimps and hot air   In 1994, he broke an around-the-world   child. Outdoor services will be held on
          balloons.                         record set in 1982 by Ross Perot Jr. and   December 28. Q
           He had served in multiple roles, including   Jay Coburn. Bower flew eastbound in the
          as a flight instructor, combat pilot, sales   206B3 Jet Ranger III, departing and ending
          executive, and purchasing consultant,   at the Bell Helicopter Textron delivery
          in addition to his east- and west-bound   center in Fort Worth, Texas. The trip began
          helicopter world records. Soloing in 1962,   on June 28, 1994, and ended a month later
          Bower’s flying and business expeditions led   on July 28, gaining recognition for a world
          him to pilot aircraft in 37 countries and visit   speed record, five specific city-to-city
          more than 50, according to a tribute site.  speed records, and as the first western
           Bower originally gained experience in the   helicopter flight across Russia.
          US Army flying Hiller observation heli-  His westbound trip followed in 1996,
          copters on the demilitarized zone border   beginning and ending in London in a Bell
          with North Korea and then Hueys during   430, setting a world speed record for a twin
          the Vietnam War. He earned 11 medals   helicopter. That trip began Aug. 17, 1996,

                                                 World Airnews | November Extra 2020
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