Finally squeezed another flight in - a quick jaunt from Kake to Petersburg/Johnson.
I have seem to of missed most of Alaska's Autumn and its now heading into winter (its 1 degrees celcius outside) - I need to get a hussle along and head south.

A few milestones
- first flight in the Carenado Cessna 182Q (my favourite Carenado a/c) on this journey
- first flight on this journey with my new FS set up
- first flight ever with Active Sky running properly
Some low cloud expected enroute



Hmm this cloud is getting a bit worrying

Now thats more like it




Approaching Petersburg

Passing Petersburg's large fishing boat fleet

I fluffed my first landing (too busy admiring the scenery) and had to go around - meanwhile a 737 was rapidly approaching .......


Down in one piece - note the 737 on the go around! - thanks to me holding everything up

The Alaskan Airlines 737 eventually made it - I better go before the 737 captain sees me

Petersburg was named after Peter Buschmann, a Norwegian immigrant who arrived in the late 1890s. He built a cannery (thanks to the plentiful number of icebergs from the nearby LeConte Glacier which would provide a source for cooling fish), a sawmill, and a dock between 1890 and 1900. His family's homesteads grew into Petersburg which, by 1910 was incorporated and was populated largely by people of Scandinavian origin thus giving Petersburg the nickname "Little Norway". May 17 (Norwegian Constitution Day) is celebrated annually in Petersburg on the third weekend in May. The cannery, along with three others have operated continuously since their completion. Petersburg is one of Alaska's major fishing communities. pop 3200 and has its own Alaskan Airlines jet service (it would be like Air NZ have a regular 737 service to Katikati!). Petersburg can only be accessed by air or sea hence the 737 service.