East Africa Pilot

East Africa Pilot
Title East Africa Pilot PDF eBook
Author Delwyn McPhun
Publisher Imray Laurie Norie & Wilson
Pages 200
Release 1998-01-01
Genre Africa, Eastern
ISBN 9780852882511

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Delwyn McPhun has cruised the coast of East Africa between Kenya and Durban for nearly a decade and has surveyed the area covered by this pilot book in detail, visiting each port, harbour and anchorage that he describes. As a long-term resident of the East African countries, he has gained unrivalled working knowledge of the people, customs and problems that the visiting yachtsman may encounter. His sailing directions and narrative have been produced as a complete handbook for both yachtsmen and diving enthusiasts. 'East Africa Pilot' is produced to the high standard that is associated with Imray cruising guides and will be recognised as the definitive work on the area.

Flying and Sport in East Africa

Flying and Sport in East Africa
Title Flying and Sport in East Africa PDF eBook
Author Leo Walmsley
Publisher
Pages 366
Release 1920
Genre Africa, East
ISBN

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Africa Pilot: South and east coasts of Africa from Cape of Good Hope to Ras Hafun

Africa Pilot: South and east coasts of Africa from Cape of Good Hope to Ras Hafun
Title Africa Pilot: South and east coasts of Africa from Cape of Good Hope to Ras Hafun PDF eBook
Author United States. Hydrographic Office
Publisher
Pages 594
Release 1916
Genre Pilot guides
ISBN

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Daktari

Daktari
Title Daktari PDF eBook
Author Thomas D. Rees
Publisher Sunstone Press
Pages 185
Release 2004-11
Genre
ISBN 0865343896

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Dr. Rees tells of the Flying Doctors of East Africa, the largest indigenous international health development and non-governmental organization in sub-Sahara Africa operating in nine African countries with a full-time staff of over 600, which was started in 1957 by three plastic surgeons.

Report [of the Commissioner for Transport Incorporating a Report of the East African Directorate of Civil Aviation]

Report [of the Commissioner for Transport Incorporating a Report of the East African Directorate of Civil Aviation]
Title Report [of the Commissioner for Transport Incorporating a Report of the East African Directorate of Civil Aviation] PDF eBook
Author East Africa High Commission. Commissioner for Transport
Publisher
Pages 48
Release 1965
Genre Aeronautics
ISBN

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West with the Night

West with the Night
Title West with the Night PDF eBook
Author Beryl Markham
Publisher Macmillan
Pages 308
Release 1983
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9780865471184

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Autobiography detailing the author's life in Africa and career as a pilot.

Self-Flying the African Bush

Self-Flying the African Bush
Title Self-Flying the African Bush PDF eBook
Author Barbara L. Feader
Publisher
Pages 204
Release 2002-03-01
Genre Travel
ISBN 9781401027896

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Always desiring to take the road least traveled, in 1998 I made plans through Smith Travel in Easton, Maryland to take one very special road and explore game preserves in South and East Africa. But the roads I travel are between 3,000 and 9,000 feet above mean sea level in the left seat of a single engine airplane. And that was how I wanted to do my exploring in South and East Africa. Mr. George Sellers, a travel agent with Smith Travel at the time, was given the task of working out my travel plans. He chose Mike Johnson and Andrew Kerrich who operate Ubuntu Safaris in Johannesburg, South Africa to customize my safari, and gave them the particulars of what they should do. They were to lease a single engine airplane for me to fly beginning in late July and lasting through August, 1998, and employ someone to validate my U. S. pilot license, qualifying me to fly a plane of African Registry. A myriad of other requests were made for them to accomplish, including a trip to visit a falconer on his farm in Jacobsdal, in the Orange Free State, for an overnight stay, a hot-air balloon flight over the Serengeti with a champagne breakfast in the middle of the desert, a two hour elephant ride in the wilds of Zimbabwe, and a flight over the Indian Ocean to the Spice Island of Zanzibar. They were to work out the details of what visa's I would need to visit game preserves in up to 10 countries in South and East Africa, and figure the cost of everything for me to pre-pay before leaving the U. S. to guard against any chance of unexpected surprises while there. The first obstacle confronting me was my age. My seventy-ninth birthday loomed less than four months away, and to qualify for insurance on the plane they leased for me, it would be necessary for me to have a co-pilot accompany me on my entire journey. I authorized them to find me a co-pilot and they engaged Ms. Kym Morton, a consultant with Ubuntu on safaris, a fifteen year veteran African bush pilot, and a grade II instructor. She agreed to validate my U.S. pilot license, and accompany me on my month long safari. To my delight, she was a member of International Women Pilots, (more prominently known as The Ninety-Nines), the same as I. Through the expertise of the people at Smith Travel, everything went along smoothly, and on the morning of July 27, I boarded my flight to New York to connect with the South African Airline for a seventeen hour flight to Johannesburg, South Africa, landing at 3:00 PM on July 28, 1998. After going through immigration, I wheeled a cart with my belongings out to the airport lobby, where I saw two handsome fellows with a large sign that read BARBARA FEADER. Assuming the obvious, I wheeled happily over to where they waited, and was soon seated in the back of their car being whisked to Lanseria Airport, just outside Johannesburg, while Mike briefed me on what plans had been made for the evening, and to meet my co-pilot, Kym, and look over the plane she had reserved for me. The plane was a high-wing Cessna Skylane 182RG similar to the one I had flown in Kalispel, Montana to take a mountain flying course in 1975, and one I had flown on safari in Australia in July and August 1978. The only difference was, it was a later model, and had retractable gear. Kym had leased the plane from the owner for our safari, but learned a day or two before I arrived that the owner had decided to sell it, leaving us without transportation. It was a squeeze play on the owner's part to force Kym to buy the plane, and it worked, because it was too late for her to make other arrangements. Had she not done so, my safari would have been snafued. I was most grateful for her "gift" and really hoped she had not put herself in an untenable situation because of me. It was then time for Mike and Andrew to drop me at my hotel, The Hertford, a few miles away, where I was really ready for a soothing soak in a hot bath, and dinner, before be