Among the earliest things we learned during our initial flying lessons, just after we sorted out the challenge of flying both straight and level at the same time, was that the view of our planet from an aircraft was utterly captivating and that the world was laid open in a fashion we had never imagined. The stunning sights we saw from aloft were the first things we described to our nonflying friends in our excitement at learning to fly.
In the Pacific Northwest, dramatic photos from flights made by LightHawk volunteer pilots documented the effects of clear-cutting on steep mountainsides and the resultant mudslides that blocked streams and rivers, badly damaging salmon spawning grounds and drastically reducing the commercial catch. The photos helped launch an effort that stopped clear-cutting on steep slopes, and preserved salmon spawning grounds.![]() |
| For nearly three decades, LightHawk has dedicated flights to groups hoping to preserve the fragile natural resources of North and Central America. |
LightHawk requires that its volunteer pilots have a minimum of 1,000 hours of pilot-in-command time, go through an interview with an experienced LightHawk pilot and have liability insurance. The reason for the high time requirement is that LightHawk wants pilots who are willing to cancel a flight when something isn’t right and will say no to someone who wants a pilot to do something that may not be safe or legal, such as fly very low or close to something or to take extra passengers or camera equipment that would put the airplane over gross weight. They also want pilots who are in the habit of flying their airplane no faster than the published approach speed and touching down on the runway centerline because it may matter on a short or narrow runway.
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