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Leg 22 - Lashio (VYLS) to Kunming (ZPPP)


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Well, here we are at Lashio for another ATWC Six leg:

Something slightly different, this time - a 375 nm flight with 20 waypoints and all in VFR. You are joking, I hear you say? Well, suspend your disbelief for a couple of minutes...

First, we go back in time - to Burmah in 1943. The Allies are having a hard time getting supplies through to Chiang Kai-shek. The Ledo (Assam) to Kunming land route is too long and a shorter route, from the railhead at Lashio, is being reconnoitered. This is where we come in. Instead of flying from Lashio to Kunming over the high plateaux, called The Hump, our job is to fly along the proposed route and determine its feasibility, and the route looks something like this, in Plan-G (Thanks, Tim!):

ATWC22_Burmah_Road_Plan-G_zpscvzjjkwq.jp

There are no, repeat NO, nav aids between VYLS and ZPPP - well, not in 1943, anyway. But we have got some old, colonial vintage, relief maps, which show the topology and some of the roads. The back-room boys have laid out a plan for the proposed route in 4 sections - from Lashio to Mangka:

ATWC22_Burmah_Road_Part_1_zpshv6ulu4m.jp

Section 2 - from Mangka to Xingfu:

ATWC22_Burmah_Road_Part_2_zps6sw1ra1r.jp

Section 3 - from Xingfu, across the Lancang Jiang (or Mekong) river up to the Ledo-Kunming road at Chuxiong:

ATWC22_Burmah_Road_Part_3_zpsu3p83jlr.jp

Section 4- the final stretch to Kunmimg:

ATWC22_Burmah_Road_Part_4_zpsk4x9ndbr.jp

Although the flight is for reconnaisance, we're taking some supplies with us. Here we are loading the faithful DC-3 up:

ATWC22_01_Loading_At_Lashio_zpswnn69kus.

Taxi-ing past the Lashio Base hospital:

ATWC22_02_Taxi_To_Active_zps94btodm5.jpg

It's a warm afternoon - the morning's rains are over, as we take off from runway 19:

ATWC22_03_Take_Off_zpszu557apn.jpg

Turning north, we fly past the base...

ATWC22_04_Return_North_Road_zpsw037t2xx.

... and pick up the road towards Thienni:

ATWC22_05_Wpt_01_Road_North_zpsriuxm7k2.

After the turn at Hseni (Thienni), we head east, up the wide valley:

ATWC22_06_Valley_Road_East_zps7uvkk7lx.j

Although the road on the proposed route looks in good shape, it's very close to those cliffs:

ATWC22_07_Lakeside_Road_zpszlasjtqk.jpg

And there are some very steep climbs, towards Mangka:

ATWC22_08_Mangka_Ahead_zpskjjyzblf.jpg

Some low cloud hides the road - but it soon clears:

ATWC22_09_Cloud_Over_Xingfu_zpspzwjnf35.

Just after Xingfu, there's been a mud slide and the road is impassable:

ATWC22_10_Mudslide_Near_Yanxiang_zpsa8nl

We've been climbing all the way from Xingfu - this terrain before Juzishan, is 7500':

ATWC22_11_High_Ground_Juzishan_zpse6v3y6

And that's the Lancang Jiang gorge ahead. The gorge sides are steep and there's no road - at the moment. A problem for the engineers!

The river Lancang Jiang becomes the Mekong, when it reaches Laos:

ATWC22_12_Mekong_Gorge_Ahead_zpsnhr6rcix

Looks like the engineers have already begun blasting this stretch to Midu:

ATWC22_13_Road_To_Midu_zps923miimr.jpg

Another high pass - but the road looks good:

ATWC22_14_Xiangyun_Turn_zpsx2oa1tbf.jpg

The sun's going down as we approach the Xiang Yung turn:

ATWC22_15_Dusk_On_Ledo_Road_zpslnpm66pc.

The navigator's says there's a new base around here - just north of the road:

ATWC22_16_Approaching_Yungan-Ni_zpshl6re

Here it is - Yungan-Ni camp:

ATWC22_17_Long_Final_Yungan-Ni_zps3jl6mg

Time for a quick cuppa and a chat with the locals:

ATWC22_18_Unloading_At_Yungan-Ni_zpsj2n6

And we're off, again:

ATWC22_19_Leaving_Yungan-Ni_zpsz0piki8f.

That's Chuxiong - just the last section to go:

ATWC22_20_Chuxiong_zps2von0vb6.jpg

Over Anning Town, the land starts to rise, again:

ATWC22_21_Anning_Town_zpsucgd2xnu.jpg

Over the last ridge, and that's Dianchi Pool ahead with Kunming beyond:

ATWC22_22_Dianchi_Pool_And_Kunming_Ahead

Turning north over the pool:

ATWC22_23_Final_Turn_Dianchi_Pool_zpshfs

Long Final at Kunming:

ATWC22_24_Long_Final_Kunming_zpsw9ttt3ub

An easy landing on runway 03:

ATWC22_25_Landing_At_Kunming_zpsgkhgvibt

And that's it:

ATWC22_26_Finish_At_Kunming_zps11jwiry0.

Just need to get the camera films to the lab and we're off for cool drink in the mess...

And, that's it, Folks! The Burmah-China mesh was made by "Roger-Wilco-66" from Sim-Outhouse and is available here:

http://www.sim-outhouse.com/sohforums/showthread.php?91041-1-arc-second-highres-mesh-for-CBI-scenario-%28FSX-P3D%29

The DC-3/C47 is by Manfred Jahn - search for "Douglas C-47 Skytrain Exterior Base Pack 1.0"

Thanks for joining me - I hope you didn't find the flight too fatiguing! Flying without nav aids is certainly not boring, especially

keeping close to the ground to follow the road.

Cheers - Dai. :old-git:

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Nicely flown Dai, :thum: with some intricate flight planning thrown in to impress this hack pilot. :D 

 

Looks like a flight I will have to add to my list of yet flown adventures. Thanks for the PIREP it was very enjoyable and sure beats the other warm air starved route.

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Lovely atmospheric stuff, Dai, and impressive scenery.     :D

 

Your Mk I eyeball is obviously in great shape, congratulations!

 

 

Cheers,

 

bruce

a.k.a. brian747

 

 

P.S. (I'll get a bloke I know with a Tardis aircraft to transport the baton to me in the current Kunming airport at Changshui, since this airport replaced the previous ZPPP in mid-2012).     ;)

 

B.

 

 

 

 

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Great flight Dai, you've really got a knack for finding some great scenery for this part of the world!

 

And I see those pesky low clouds were present back in the 40's as well  ;)

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Thanks for your kind comments, Lads - I always feel a bit lost in today's tube-liner world, so it's nice to have the old Dizzie to fall back on. And those Google relief maps were a godsend.

Cheers - Dai. :old-git:

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..So you did fly IFR (I Follow Roads) after all!  > Flying without nav aids is certainly not boring, especially keeping close to the ground to follow the road. 

 

Ah! a trip down memory lane! :cloudnine: A very enjoyable PIREP as always Captain Dai.

 

 

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