Wonwings diary-Fokker Universal recovery from Lake Charron.
Only slightly discouraged after suffering some minor setbacks, the crew working on recovering a historic aircraft from the depths of Charron Lake is certain the airplane will arrive in Winnipeg as scheduled, later this month. Known as the Ghost of Charron Lake, the 1928 Fokker Standard aircraft was forced to make an emergency landing on the lake, 310 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg in December of 1931. Bush pilot Stuart McRorie and mechanic Neville Forrest safely escaped and were helped by aboriginal trapper Tom Boulanger before being found by rescuers two weeks later. Their airplane, which had been enroute to Island Lake with mining tools, slipped through the ice the following spring before salvage efforts could be made.
For nearly 75 years after its descent into the deep, rocky-bottomed lake, the historic plane eluded search teams, earning the nickname the Ghost of Charron Lake. Finally, last summer, a search team succeeded in locating the airplane's skeletal remains using sophisticated side-scan sonar equipment.
Since the beginning of July, that same team, joined by other experts from across Canada, has been working on the remote lake to recover the plane. Originally owned by prominent Winnipeg businessman James A. Richardson, founder of Canada's first commercial airline, Western Canada Airways, the Fokker has been regarded by historians as an instrumental part of opening up much of Northern Manitoba to human activity and industry. Once exhumed from its watery grave, the single-engine, open-cockpit plane which is thought to be the only remaining salvageable Fokker Standard in the world will be returned to Winnipeg where it will make its permanent home at the Western Canada Aviation Museum.
After spending the past year formulating a detailed strategy to raise the Ghost plane, the recovery team has been forced to revise those plans after it was discovered that predetermined lift points on the plane had disintegrated during its nearly 75 years underwater.
It's still coming up, said project team leader Patrick Madden, a retired RCMP sergeant adding that the recovery process has also been hampered by unruly weather and equipment problems. We're just having to find new ways to lift it up out of the water.
With the elusive aircraft resting in 120 feet of water, the team had hoped it would not have to send scuba divers down. Instead, they had hoped on using two Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs) to do the deep-water work for them, using the sophisticated machines to attach cables to the plane's lifting lugs. The aircraft would be slowly raised to just below the lake's surface, and it would be towed to the lakeshore and lifted by a boom onto a specially-built platform. Helicopters would then lift the entire platform to an airport in Deer Lake, Ont., the closest airport able to accommodate the C-130 Hercules tasked with transporting the bush airplane to Winnipeg.
With those original plans scrapped, an experienced crew of deep-water scuba divers has been called in. They are set to arrive on Saturday, pending the availability of a hyperbaric chamber, a piece of equipment used by deep-water divers to treat decompression sickness. They will dive to the airplane's grave, examining it to see if new lift points can be established. If not, they will begin the arduous task of attaching slings under the aircraft that will be used to lift the skeletal frame to the surface.