Atlantica - 01.06.2006, Qupperneq 31

Atlantica - 01.06.2006, Qupperneq 31
30 AT L A N T I CA on the fly When people ask me what I do, I tell them that, you know, it’s a sightseeing trip with the opportunity to join the mile-high club. Some people have brought up that it’s amoral or whatever, but I just say, hey, you have friends who’ve been to motels, who own motels. If someone came up to you to rent a room for a night, you wouldn’t turn them down. The only thing I’m doing is renting them the space to do what they want for an hour. I started flying people up in my Piper Cherokee 6, a single engine airplane, maybe four or five years ago. It’s a really stable plane. Just two people won’t get anything out of balance. It fits four, technically, but I take out two of the seats and put in a mattress. The business started off kind of slow, but now I do about one a week. I’m up to probably 75 or 100 now. I take up all kinds of people, all shapes, sizes, ages from the late teens into their sixties. Just, you know, a general everybody. You probably wouldn’t guess, but about 80 percent of the people who book the rides are female. Everyone’s generally pretty cool with it. Nobody’s really all that embarrassed. You have to be open- minded a little bit and kind of, I guess, sexually liberated to be able to do that with someone just a curtain away. I wear headsets and with the curtain down I can’t see what’s going on, but I know when things liven up in the back. We leave from West Georgia Regional Airport, which is about 30 miles west of Atlanta. The views are generally just countryside and a couple of towns. Sometimes I have the option of flying over downtown Atlanta but you have to go lower than 5,000 feet because of the air space. Usually I take them up to 6,500 feet for about 45 minutes. The sunset flight is probably the most popular. We take off about 30 minutes before sunset and land a little bit after dark. I’ve also done some night flights and they’re really pretty. I did have one guy call me up once asking if he could have a two-hour flight. And I got to thinking, hey, this must be some superman-type. I tell people to just tap me on the shoulder if they need something. We had been in the air for half an hour when he taps me on the shoulder and tells me that I can go back down any time, that it didn’t take as long as he thought. It turned into a one-hour flight instead of two. Everyone has to abide by the FAA [Federal Aviation Administration] rules. I give them a timer before I take off and set it for 50 minutes. When the timer goes off they know they have ten minutes to get their seatbelts back on so we can land. I used to just stick a piece of paper back there telling them they had ten minutes, but realized a timer works better. When we land, I give them a certificate that says ‘Congratulations, you joined the Mile High Club.’ a Mile High Atlanta. www.milehighatlanta.com CONFESSIONS OF A MILE-HIGH PILOT As told to Sara Blask. IL LU S TR AT IO N B Y L IL JA G U N N A R S D Ó TT IR Meet Bob Smith, 50, a corporate pilot based in Carrollton, Georgia, and the man behind Mile High Atlanta. With more than 30 years of flying experience, you can be assured that he’ll keep the wings steady. 009 airmail Atlantica 406 .indd 30 23.6.2006 11:31:49
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Atlantica

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