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201er's Caribbean Adventure #2


201er

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The flight from St Thomas to Beef Island was very short, yet it was a little challenging. Cruising IFR at 3000ft put me into a scattered to broken layer over Tortola. Before entering the clouds, I could not see the airport so I could not accept a visual approach. So they assigned me the NDB approach! I don't have ADF but I began flying the overlay on the 430W.

During a break between the clouds, I spotted the field, requested a visual, and dropped down before hitting clouds again!

The visit to Tortola was short but fulfilling. It is very similar to the US Virgin Islands but with a little bit of British flavor to it.

Briefing the international flight to St Martin

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Beef island is only 4500ft runway with nothing more than an NDB approach! No jet airline traffic. Mostly light twins.

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The departure procedure was runway heading to 1000ft and then a turn southbound. It wasn't until reaching 3000ft that I was cleared on course eastbound. At 5000ft I got to rest for 15 minutes of cruise before I had to begin dealing with arrival procedures.

Juliana "approach" was swamped. The guy in the tower was acting as ground, tower, clearance delivery, approach, and departure all in one for a fairly busy international airport! It took 10 minutes of calling before I received any acknowledgment. I was issued direct to a fix that was not on the approach plate or enroute chart so I had trouble with understanding the poor pigeon English. When I called in "unable", I received a fairly prompt response with clarification!

The San Juan controller that handed me off gave me "radar service terminated." The Juliana controller never stated radar contact so I was really confused if I needed to make position reports or not. But with the frequency congestion, I probably couldn't even if I tried.

Upon reaching the fix, I was cleared for the VOR Z approach. It includes a DME arc and some other complexities so I opted for the RNAV approach instead! I decided the VOR approach was an interesting challenge but not for an actual flight like this in busy airspace, over water, with an overworked yet barely competent controller. So I kept it simple and let the GPS guide me.

I was below clouds in no time but appreciated the approach for guidance. I came down across the world famous Maho Beach where airplanes land low over beachers! It was like a dream! So many videos I've watched of airplanes coming in to land on St Martin and here I was piloting my own craft low across the beach full of onlookers! It was exciting. I dipped down to the lower end of a completely normal approach to get a closer encounter. I did not go anything below a normal glides lope though because I was still on edge from the whole approach.

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I am running two gopros on my bird so I hope to share some really cool footage from this landing when I get back.

After clearing the runway, I had to wait quite a while before the busy tower came back with a taxi instruction. I was going to Signature aviation so I was confused when they sent me to the main ramp. Turns out they park planes wherever and then bring you over to the FBO in a car. FBO is putting it generously. More like a trailer at the side of the airport. Unexpected for an office carrying the Signature name.

I've heard that St Martin is considered very difficult. The low landing glide path over the beach isn't really the reason though. I think it is more to do with the lack of a precision approach and the poor airspace management.

I am used to flying in NY Approach airspace which handles hundreds of times more traffic. Our controllers are competent, clear, and efficient. I have flown approaches between jets into busy Charlies and Bravos with far better communication and organization than here.

I would say that that St Martin is a fairly busy airport, however, due to poor organization, it comes off as super busy. A typical Charie during medium load is at least as busy but much less loaded because of good distribution of labor and organized procedures.

So far the island is very nice and a blast though!

Edited by 201er
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9 hours ago, 201er said:

Beef island is only 4500ft runway with nothing more than an NDB approach! No jet airline traffic. Mostly light twins.

During peak periods, private jets are parked tip to tip, nose to tail.  The ramp space is limited.  Some jet operators will not use the airport at night.  4500' is okay until it gets wet!

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My wife is learning about all the different kinds of airplanes. What better place than Maho Beach in St Martin to go plane spotting!?

 

West Jet - Boeing 737-700 C-FIBW

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JetBlue - Airbus A320-232 N598JB

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Continited Boeing 737-724 N15710

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201ER Mooney M20J N4361H

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KLM Boeing 747-406 PH-BFA

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Great pics and what a terrific adventure..Living vicariously through you looking at these (minus the pants jokes, you can keep the those). I've really enjoyed tagging along via computer and MS. To be able to do this kind of trip twice...wow.  LTD (Living the Dream).. Awesome Mike!

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Came down with bad stomach flu. Both of us. Can't fly, can't leave room. Entire hotel Sonesta Maho Beach infected. Shows up 48 hours from getting it, we must have picked it up the moment we walked through the door. Hotel is lying and downplaying the situation by putting out hand sanitizers and a small written notice rather than warning people and giving refunds. 

We were supposed to fly to Anguilla and then to San Juan today. Neither of us is in condition to walk to the lobby let alone fly. We're stuck here until there is some improvement. I feel bad for the poor unsuspecting schmuck flying out by airline next to patrons of this hotel.

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I had that happen to me once coming back home from Central America in Mexico - but it was food poisoning after a lobster dinner. Luckily just me and not my wife. She enjoyed a couple extra days of the beach in Mazatlan while I remained in the room chained to the toilet. Then it was home in one more long day. Get well!

I see you are a wiz with Photoshop! Unless your bride took that photo of you landing again.

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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1 hour ago, 201er said:

Came down with bad stomach flu. Both of us. Can't fly, can't leave room. Entire hotel Sonesta Maho Beach infected.

Hope you feel better.......

Welcome to international flying.........never leave home without Imodium AD.....and cipro

Edited by Jim Peace
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1 minute ago, Jim Peace said:

Hope you feel better.......

Welcome to international flying.........never leave home without Imodium AD.....and cipro

Yeah but this is waaay beyond that. This is Norovirus that isn't treatable by anything.

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