Short Strips and Flying Pigs
When flying in Papua, be prepared for surprises.
- By Nate Gordon
- Air & Space magazine, July 2012
The fine folks at Moody Aviation did a standout job of teaching us aspiring missionary pilots how to keep an airplane right side up. But they didn’t teach us everything we needed to know to navigate the jungles—and cultures—in the Indonesian province of Papua. To better prepare young pilots, Moody might do well to consider situations such as:
If someone has ridden in a seat with a bare bottom, do you have to clean the cushion or can you just flip it over?
If a tribal war breaks out around the airplane, do you intervene or join the side that appears to be winning?
Does the seat belt go outside the penis-protector gourd or inside?
Adult pigs, even when secured under a cargo net, are capable of shaking the airplane in flight. What degree of pig-induced vibration is the airplane structurally rated for?
On landing, when one or both brakes fail, what is the proper prayer to recite?
Moody used Cessna 185 Skywagon taildraggers to prepare me to fly Helio Couriers into short mountain airstrips. But flying in remote parts of the developing world is an experience unto itself, and Moody neglected to teach me how to fly while:
Laughing
Crying
Gagging
Panicking
Passengers are screaming
Pigs are screaming
Passengers are screaming because the screaming pigs got loose.





Comments (4)
Very amusing article. I would like a much longer one!
Posted by Andre Mathieu on June 22,2012 | 04:07 PM
That was hysterical! Wondering if the writer took artistic license to describe all those dubiously wonderful situations. Loved it!
Posted by Harolene Leguizamon on June 25,2012 | 08:25 AM
Brings new meaning to "God is my co-pilot".
Posted by Scott Mickow on June 30,2012 | 01:34 PM
I was very surprised to see this great story in my school's A&S mag today! Uncle Nate's good ole stories always amuse me!
I used to wake up at 5 in the morning at the sound of his hardtop setting off for work. Now I know what he's been up to! Still wish I was his neighbor.
Posted by Er-Jin Jang on August 22,2012 | 05:21 AM