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Posted By: Hal Brown
Date Posted: Apr 4, 2012
Description: The latest count is over 40,000 islands!! Do not land in the water in Everglades National Park! @ ultralight pilots recently lost their planes and licenses for doing that! Use Everglades Airport...
Date Taken: Apr 4, 2012
Place Taken: 10,000
Owner: Wayne Nagy
File Name: FairviewMadisionEvergladeCity040412_071.jpg   - Photo HTML
Full size     - <img src="/show.php?splash=SZOGJ0000h">
Medium    - <img src="/show.php?splash=SZOGJ0000m">
Thumbnail - <img src="/show.php?splash=SZOGJ0000s">

Category: 34, Florida Flying
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Read what others had to say:


Dan Nickens - Apr 04,2012   Viewers  | Reply
    Great picture, Wayne. That's sad about the UL pilots. The park guys have no sense of fun.     
  
Frank A. Carr - Apr 05,2012   Viewers  | Reply
    I'm curious about the US Statute that allows the government to seize property for failure to follow some agency's "rule"?Further, there is an Island, just inside the park boundary called "Pavilion Key" that features a sandy beach, porta poties, campers and motor boats; perfect for UL's or SR's.Not sure if these "rules" are based on ignorance or the slippery slope to despotism?BTW Wayne, your photos are great!<!-- >'"><br><font color=red size=6>' or &gt; missing in user HTML. Please fix the HTML.</font> -->     
  
Steve Kessinger - Apr 05,2012   Viewers  | Reply
    It's gotten even worse on the left coast. The FAA has given NOAA enforcement power for what NOAA perceives to be low flying over some Marine Sanctuaries. An untrained park ranger on the ground could claim you were flying too low, and the burden is on you to prove you did not and were not disturbing wildlife.<br /><a href="http://www.aopa.org/advocacy/articles/2012/120223pilots-in-pacific-northwest-could-face-steep-fines.html">http://www.aopa.org/advocacy/articles/2012/120223pilots-in-p<br>acific-northwest-could-face-steep-fines.html</a>     


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