Ski Club 2.0 Home
Snow Reports
FAQFAQ

Mail for help.Help!!

Log in to snowHeads to make it MUCH better! Registration's totally free, of course, and makes snowHeads easier to use and to understand, gives better searching, filtering etc. as well as access to 'members only' forums, discounts and deals that U don't even know exist as a 'guest' user. (btw. 50,000+ snowHeads already know all this, making snowHeads the biggest, most active community of snow-heads in the UK, so you'll be in good company)..... When you register, you get our free weekly(-ish) snow report by email. It's rather good and not made up by tourist offices (or people that love the tourist office and want to marry it either)... We don't share your email address with anyone and we never send out any of those cheesy 'message from our partners' emails either. Anyway, snowHeads really is MUCH better when you're logged in - not least because you get to post your own messages complaining about things that annoy you like perhaps this banner which, incidentally, disappears when you log in :-)
Username:-
 Password:
Remember me:
👁 durr, I forgot...
Or: Register
(to be a proper snow-head, all official-like!)

50th anniversary of 'retractable skis' landings on Mount Cook - 1 October

 Poster: A snowHead
Poster: A snowHead
1 October will mark the 50th anniversary of pioneering 'skied landings' of aircraft on Mount Cook, New Zealand. These flights, landing on the Tasman Glacier, are a big tourist draw.

This report from scoop.co.nz describes how retractable skis were designed to land the "single-engine Auster flown by former RNZAF wing commander Harry (later Sir Henry) Wigley ... achieved on 22 September 1955."

So the anniversary won't be to the day (due to weather problems on 22 September? The report doesn't say) but it's clearly an event of great nostalgic significance.
Quote:
A former Canadian bush pilot, ‘Carp” (E.H.) Carpenter, who was head of the New Zealand Air Department’s Airworthiness Division (a forerunner of CAA), provided advice on the design of retractable skis.

Kiwi ingenuity took the concepts further and after hundreds of hours of testing a set of laminated Oregon pine skis were fitted to an Auster Aiglet aircraft. The skis were raised by a system of radius rods for take-off and lowered for snow landings.
snow report



Terms and conditions  Privacy Policy