Wednesday, January 26, 2011

2010 ... Planes land on frozen Lake Calhoun

Planes land in hot water on frozen Lake Calhoun


By PAUL WALSH and MARY LYNN SMITH, Star Tribune Staff Writers

Pilots thought they were within the law.

Two pilots landed small airplanes on frozen Lake Calhoun in Minneapolis and left the aircraft there as they walked away for lunch Monday afternoon, then were ticketed and had to wait a few hours before federal officials cleared them for takeoff.

Park Police Capt. Robert Goodsell said that the two single-engine planes were parked on very thick ice on the north end of the urban lake, and both pilots had been ticketed for landing in a city park without a permit. The planes touched down about noon on one of Minneapolis' most famous bodies of water, Goodsell said.

"The pilots are cooperative... and contrite," Goodsell said. "[They] didn't know we had ordinance against that. They were very apologetic."

Pilot Hans Meyer, of Burnsville, said he and his friend, Mike Doherty, of Le Sueur, Minn., checked with federal and state regulations and the Minneapolis city website to ensure that the landing was legal. "It was a beautiful winter day, and we wanted to see downtown," Meyer said about his choice of lakes. "It was only until we came back from lunch that we found the police weren't on board with it."

They took off about 3:45 p.m. after local officials had consulted with the Federal Aviation Administration.

Tom Hatch said that the spectacle of two airplanes on the lake outside his office caught his attention.

"I looked out my office window and saw three Minneapolis squad cars pulled up ... on the north end of Calhoun," Hatch said. "As I walked out of my office, I saw the two single-engine aircraft with skis parked on the lake.

"I went across Lake Street and asked the officers if this was a planned event, and they said it was not and landing on a Minneapolis lake is not allowed without approval." Hatch added that the officer said he had never seen such a thing in his 30-plus years on the force.


Rumor of an America's Cup alternative race circulating


Read more: Rumor of an America's Cup alternative race circulating
San Francisco Business Times

Patrick Twohy
Senior Editor
Email: ptwohy@bizjournals.com

The idea of sailing the America's Cup in hyper-fast catamarans has some in the more hidebound corners of the sailing world a little cranky. That's perhaps one reason behind a rumor that some potential America's Cup racing syndicates are considering a more traditional alternative to the extravaganza planned for San Francisco Bay.

Read more: Rumor of an America's Cup alternative race circulating
San Francisco Business Times
 http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/blog/2011/01/rumor-of-an-americas-cup-alternative.html