
Not your normal view of the Queen of Burnaby approaching the BC Ferries terminal at Little River.






Moon snail shells I found at Kay Bay – homes for little crabs



A dead, sun bleached sand dollar at Kay Bay

Once the home of Mr Crabby…


Kay Bay – looking across Georgia Strait toward Port Alberni


The RCAF Snowbirds flying over a large crowd at Air Force Beach, adjacent to 19 Wing Comox, during their annual spring training season.
If you have driven past the Comox Valley visitor Centre you’ll recognize this airplane, and if you’re a fan of the RCAF Snowbirds you’ll probably know what it is – a Canadian built, Canadair CT-114 Tutor. The jetsicle (jet on a plinth) is a fitting, as 19 Wing Comox and the Comox Valley are the training grounds for the Snowbirds annual multi week spring training session.
There’s another local connection to the Snowbirds – Captain Matthew Hart, aka Snowbird 5 Second Line Astern. Captain Hart is from Parksville.
If you look at the tail of the jet on display you’ll see a large number 5, as in Snowbird 5, and a smaller 114115 – the tail number, or registration number, for the jet
This Canadair CT-114 Tutor CL-41A started life as construction number 1115, was numbered as RCAF 26115 when delivered to the RCAF, and was later renumbered to 114115 when the Canadian Forces adopted a six digit numbering system for aircraft. The first three digits are the aircraft type (CT-114) and the last three digits, the production number (115).

Snowbird 5
In 1996 the jet was stored at Aerospace & Telecommunications Engineering Support Squadron, CFB Mountain View, Ontario, near 8 Wing Trenton. It was classified as a museum article on 8 November 2000, and transferred for display at the Comox Air Force Museum in 2005.
Now for the interesting part – this jet was operated by the Snowbirds as:
So how despite never having flown as Snowbird 5, did this jet come to be marked as Snowbird 5?
10 April 2001, as the Snowbirds landed at Comox in a nine-plane diamond formation, the nose and right wing landing gear of Snowbird 5 collapsed. No one was injured.
And now you know…

The Comox Air Park…

C-GPGW, a 1980 Mooney M20K flying circuits at the Courtenay Air Park

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C-FXUN, a 1958 Dehavilland DHC-2 MK. I at the Courtenay Airpark Seaplane Base