Anahim Lake Airport

Anahim Lake Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorCariboo Regional District
LocationAnahim Lake, British Columbia
Time zonePST (UTC−08:00)
 • Summer (DST)PDT (UTC−07:00)
Elevation AMSL3,639 ft / 1,109 m
Coordinates52°27′05″N 125°18′13″W / 52.45139°N 125.30361°W / 52.45139; -125.30361
WebsiteOfficial website
Map
CAJ4 is located in British Columbia
CAJ4
CAJ4
Location in British Columbia
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
13/31 4,642 1,415 asphalt
Sources[1][2]

Anahim Lake Airport (IATA: YAA, TC LID: CAJ4), which serves the west Chilcotin, is about 1.0 nautical mile (1.9 km; 1.2 mi) south of the village of Anahim Lake, British Columbia, Canada.

Lake landings

During the 1944–45 winter of World War II, the Canadian military held an exercise called the Polar Bear Expedition, which trained troops to operate in extreme cold. A temporary airfield was established north of the village on the frozen lake, where various aircraft took part.[3]

Early developments

In 1977, work started on the airstrip.[4] In October 1979, the paved airstrip officially opened.[5]

A $75,000 grant received in September 1981[6] was used to extend the runway to about a mile and upgrade fencing. Two years later, a larger grant completed cross stripping and paving.[7] From 1982, the airport hosted an annual Anahim Lake Fly-In for several years.[8] In October 1983, the Anahim Lake Airport and Nimpo Lake Airstrip associations merged to form the Anahim Lake-Nimpo Lake Airport Commission.[9]

In mid-1984, Wilderness Airlines (subsidiary of Pacific Coastal Airlines) began scheduled flights at the airport.[10] The next year, the government gave 70.93 hectares (175 acres) of Crown land (then in use for the airstrip or available for future expansion) to the regional district.[11]

In 1990, the highways ministry withdrew free snow clearing at the airport.[12] That year, the airport received a $100,000 grant to extend the runway. However, the limited storage of the gas station style fuel system was inadequate to handle the twice daily Wilderness Airlines flights.[13] In 1991, about 910 litres; 240 US gallons (200 imp gal) of jet-B fuel spilled from a tanker into a ditch one mile west.[14]

Safety upgrades

In 1991, a DOT inspection discovered a series of safety deficiencies, prompting a threat to revoke the airport licence.[15] A grant of up to $10,000 was received to bring the airport up to an acceptable operational standard.[16] In 1994, the weather station lease was renewed.[17]

In 2000, about $1 million was spent to rehabilitate the runway and taxiway to enhance safety.[18] In 2004, the airport footprint was expanded for safety and environmental reasons.[19] In 2010, the airport received funding for paving about 210 metres (700 ft) of existing gravel runway, which enabled safer winter landings and increased passenger carrying capacity year-round.[20] In 2011, funding came for a runway sweeper to handle winter conditions.[21]

Major expansion

In 2013, a new self-serve fueling system was installed.[22] That year, the new 90-square-metre (970 sq ft), two-storey terminal was completed. The wooden building included a large covered parking area for the runway sweeper, an office, a waiting area, two bathrooms, and a finished suite for the caretaker upstairs.[23] The facility enabled increased airport use by residents, visitors, tourism operators, medical personnel, and the RCMP, and provided operational space for personnel during emergencies such as forest fires and medevacs.[24] In 2014, the new terminal officially opened.[25]

In 2021, the airport received a $300,000 grant to grade alongside the runway and to upgrade the unused runway surface so that the whole length became available. This permitted heavier passenger and cargo load limits for aircraft.[26]

Later developments

The active runway is 1,415 by 23 metres (4,642 by 75 ft).[1] A gravel east–west runway is visible but not maintained or used.[27] Avgas and jet fuel are pumped year-round. Tenants keep the six private hangars and four aircraft shelters occupied.[22]

Down 50 per cent from 2021, aircraft movements in 2022[28] totalled 1,054 of which 12 were medevacs.[1] The scheduled service by Pacific Coastal Airlines processes about 3,000 passengers annually at the terminal. In addition, Bella Coola Heli Sports handles about 50 charter flights. In 2023, the airport applied for a grant to help finance a 93-square-metre (1,000 sq ft) expansion of the terminal building.[29] The goals set for that year included an apron expansion, better drainage, and installing solar panels on the terminal building.[30]

Accidents and incidents

  • May 2013: A Cessna 205 flipped forward when struck by a whirlwind on powering up.[31]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c "Anahim Lake Airport". www.cariboord.ca.
  2. ^ "Canada Flight Supplement" (PDF). www.navcanada.ca. 31 Dec 2020. p. 13.
  3. ^ Weicht, Christopher (2004). North By Northwest. Creekside Publications. pp. 103–104. ISBN 1-4120-2456-0.
  4. ^ "Quesnel Cariboo Observer". www.newspapers.com. 21 Dec 1977. p. A4.
  5. ^ "Quesnel Cariboo Observer". www.newspapers.com. 24 Oct 1979. p. B1. On Sunday, I travelled to Anahim Lake to take part in the official opening of the new Anahim Lake airstrip…
    "Quesnel Cariboo Observer". www.newspapers.com. 27 Nov 1979. p. A1. …recently completed the paving of the runway at Anahim Lake…
  6. ^ "Quesnel Cariboo Observer". www.newspapers.com. 29 Sep 1981. p. A3.
  7. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 8 Mar 1983. p. 3. …to complete cross stripping and paving at the Anahim Lake. Airstrip. In 1981 a grant of $75,000 was used to extend the existing runway to about a mile and upgrade fencing and windsock facilities.
  8. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 16 Oct 1984. p. 15.
  9. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 27 Oct 1983. p. 2.
  10. ^ "Province". www.newspapers.com. 3 Jun 1984. p. 70. Wilderness Airlines of Bella Coola is offering daily flights between Vancouver and Williams Lake, Anahim Lake, Nimpo, Bella Coola and Dean River.
  11. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 9 May 1985. p. 6.
  12. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 1 Feb 1990. p. 8.
  13. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 17 Jul 1990. p. 3. Anahim Lake is getting $100,000 to extend its airport runway. However, the airport is still in need of a new fuel system…Airport is currently serviced by a gas station style fuel system. It needs a proper aviation pump with larger storage… Anahim Lake is currently serviced by Wilderness Airlines with a minimum of two flights per day…
  14. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 28 May 1991. p. 3. About 200 gallons of jet-B fuel spilled from a tanker one mile west of Anahim Lake…A three to four-inch crack developed in the weld of a transport tanker…spilling the fuel into a gravel ditch.
  15. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 24 Sep 1991. p. 7. Transport Canada has given Cariboo Regional District until November 1 to facilitate repairs to the Anahim Lake Airport. If the regional district fail to comply, it will lose its authority to operate the facility…the runway requires crackfilling, the paved/gravelled shoulder…pot holes must be repaired, brush clearing along the runway must be done…restrict unauthorized vehicular and pedestrian traffic, numbers must be painted on the runway, and the old threshold markings removed.
  16. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 21 Nov 1991. p. 14.
  17. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 28 Jun 1994. p. 3.
  18. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 22 Aug 2000. p. 2.
  19. ^ "Quesnel Cariboo Observer". www.newspapers.com. 28 Mar 2004. p. 1. The Cariboo Regional District will take over three tracts of land for upgrading the Anahim Lake Airport to Transport Canada certification levels, the extension of a major greenbelt initiative, and a natural habitat outdoor education area…
  20. ^ "Northern Development Newsletter". www.northerndevelopment.bc.ca. Sep 2014.
  21. ^ "Quesnel Cariboo Observer". www.newspapers.com. 11 May 2011. p. A4. Recently the CRD was advised by Transport Canada that its Airport Capital Assistance Program (ACAP) application for up to $171,320 for the purchase of runway sweeping equipment for the Anahim Lake was approved.
  22. ^ a b Campbell 2022, p. 11.
  23. ^ "Anahim Lake Airport Terminal". www.naturallywood.com.
  24. ^ "Anahim Lake Airport Improvement Project Supports Economic Development in the West Chilcotin". www.northerndevelopment.bc.ca.
  25. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.newspapers.com. 21 May 2014. p. A7. The Cariboo Regional District's (CRD) new Anahim Lake Airport terminal was officially opened this morning.
  26. ^ "My Cariboo Now". www.mycariboonow.com. 25 Feb 2021.
  27. ^ "AVSIM Library: Anahim Lake". library.avsim.net. 29 Nov 2018.
  28. ^ Campbell 2022, p. 5.
  29. ^ "Williams Lake Tribune". www.wltribune.com. 8 Feb 2023.
  30. ^ Campbell 2022, p. 2.
  31. ^ "Aviation Safety Letter" (PDF). tc.canada.ca. 2014. p. 33.

References

  • Campbell, Darron (2022). 2023 Business Plan Anahim Lake Airport (PDF). www.cariboord.ca (Report).
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