Sunday, June 30, 2013

B-17 Crash Site: Post I, June 8, 2013

In Scouting every Troop holds an annual planning conference once per year to determine the calendar of outings and events for the following year.  During a specific time of year all the scouts in the Troop get together and develop a wish list of places and/or things they want to do over the course of the next year.  This list various greatly from the extreme (such as skydiving in swim trunks over Disneyland) to the mediocre (I want to go camping...)  Once the SPL (Senior Patrol Leader) has his list he then turns it over to the Scoutmaster for consideration.  The Scoutmaster schedules a meeting with all of the ASMs (Assistant Scoutmasters), the troop committee chair, and the SPL and ASPL (Assistant Senior Patrol Leader). This meeting is known as the Troop Annual Planning Conference.

Every Troop has their own unique way of organizing their annual planning.  In Troop 136 we ask the scouts to turn in their list by June 1 of each year, with the conference scheduled for the second week of that month. During the conference the adult and scout leadership go over the selections and determine what is feasible, what is plain nuts (skydiving over Disneyland), and what we might be able to pull off (the somewhat crazy in-between).

One of the more popular type of outing that the Troop organizes every few years is a bush-whack.  This is where we find a place, usually up in the Sierras off the I-80 or US 50 corridors, and take the scouts off-trail in country where they have to rely on their orienteering skills in order to find their designated campsites (please don't worry -- we have done this many times and have always brought back at least a piece of all our scouts :-)

Sure enough, as our Scoutmaster went down the list the scouts had added the term "bush whack" to the many types of adventures they wanted to have.  Now, in a perfect world the scouts would have qualified this with a "bush whack to..., or "bush whack in so-and-so national forest."  Considering the scouts range from ages 12 to 18 we are happy enough that they tell us, in some form of teen-speak, what it is they want to do.  The rest of it is simply brainstorming and seeing how much trouble our own adolescent minds (by the way, one of of the prerequisites of becoming an ASM is that your sense of adventure must be on par with - or at least equal to - the average 17-year-old.)

The trick to designing a bush whack is keeping it new, interesting and very different from the last one.  Which is why we only schedule one every two or three years.  This way, the younger guys hear about the last one from the older scouts, and we keep it fresh for the older guys who tend to think that once they survived one, the next will be a piece of cake.

The last time we had organized a serious bush whack trip was three years before, so we were due for another. The last one took place near Carr Lake, in the Lakes Basin area off Hwy 20 and I-80.  Using Carr Lake as a base camp, we sent pairs of scouts 15 minutes apart on a cross-country course up toward their final destination at Crooked Lakes.  All of the scout pairs got lost at least once, somehow made it to their correct campsites, survived a night in the rain without tents, and came back with a virtual treasure chest of stories to tell.

Now it was time to do it again...

I had read somewhere about a crashed B-17 that was located in the Sierras.  I mentioned the fact and one of our newer ASMs, Tom Moore, jumped on it.  The outing that developed is his brainchild and I am positive it will go down in the history of the troop as one of the greatest outings of all time...

Working with a few of our older scouts, Tom was able to create an outing plan that not only challenged our scouts physically and mentally, but threw in a bit of previously unknown military history as well.

After several months of preparation and research a day trip was organized for a handful of ASMs and older scouts to head up to the crash location and see if we could successfully locate the wreckage.  On June 8 we left temperatures of 108 in Sacramento for the cooler 90 degree temp of the Sierras.  By 11 AM we were on site and began our search for the wreckage.

 ***A quick note about the research we did in the months before this outing.  Tom spent a lot of time talking to people he knew who had been up there and searching the web for any information he could find.  From what we could tell, the way our hike developed was much different than the path taken by others to the crash site.  Since half the fun is doing your own research and finding your own way to the site I will leave the trail descriptions rather vague.  If you would like more information, especially in coordinating a troop outing in the same area we organized ours please send me a note.***

The parking lot at the trail-head was much larger than we expected and I noted that our troop, or any troop for that matter, could easily prepare a car camp at the location.  After walking less than 10 minutes we came to a large clearing that could easily be used as backpack camp or even portable base camp for large unit activities.  Beyond the clearing we followed the trail for another mile before we came to the spot where we needed to work our way cross country.  Taking a bearing on our compasses and double checking our GPS we stepped off the trail and into wild country.

Bush whack time...
My son Gavin taking a break off-trail.
Scouts double checking their maps?
On the way to the crash site.

After a few minor misadventures we arrived at the right wing crash site in less than 20 minutes.  It is hard to describe the build up of excitement that went through me as we got closer and closer and then finally glimpsed the glint of sun on metal through the trees.  The three lead scouts shouted then broke into a run as they saw the wreckage laid out on the forest floor.  I stepped into the clearing and saw the massive piece of wreckage for the first time.  It is one thing to look up internet sites and examine photos taken by others but it is quite another to be there yourself looking upon the twisted metal that has lain there for over 70 years.

The right wing crash site.
Me at the main crash site.
The propeller housing.

Each of us gave a moment of silence then we all broke into excited cheers and photo taking as we began to go over the site.  After 15 minutes we had calmed down enough to break out the maps and start searching for the tail section.  With new confidence we marched off into the forest thinking that this wasn't going to be so hard after all...

On the way to the tail section...this isn't so bad.

We quickly found our way blocked by some of the thickest and roughest terrain in the Sierras.  Only by sheer determination did we manage to find our away across a foliage choked creek crossing and almost impenetrable tree filled gully.  Once across and on the other side we were faced with a very steep ridge-line. It was at this point some of us were wondering if it was even worth bringing the troop this far.  The scouts made up our minds for us and continued on, climbing half way up the ridge then making their own trail across as they searched for the tail wreckage.  Their spirit paid off and they found the crash site within ten minutes.

Gavin crossing the gully.
It's where?
The tail section.

This section of the plane is hands down the most difficult site to get to.  Just by looking at the crash site it is easy to make the assumption that not many searchers get this far.  There is wreckage all over, from the large tail section to smaller pieces of finger-sized aluminum.  The decision was made then that this section of the crash site would be made optional for those scouts who thought themselves hearty enough to make the trip.

The tail section.

An interesting note about the tail section: this aircraft is a pre-WWII plane.  It has the original star-emblem of the Army Air Corps before it was changed after the United States entered the war on Dec 8, 1941.  The emblem on the tail section just happened to land at an angle, with the star facing down.  This has protected the emblem from the elements and even though the wreckage is over 70-years-old, the emblem on the tail section is as clear as day.

Gavin and I at the tail section. You can see the star emblem just behind us.

Leaving the tail section we made our way back to the main wreckage and reoriented our maps for the last part of our search: the left wing.  According to our information the left wing was within 200 yards of the main crash site.  We spread out and within 10 minutes we were all gathered at the left wing.  Not that this is was the easiest section to find.  If we hadn't known to look for the wing wreckage we never would have known it was there.  This is the smallest of the three sites, but no less powerful.  The smaller wing section lies on the forest floor, nearly forgotten by time in a place that is so obvious but mostly ignored.

Searching for the left wing.
It should be right over here...
Gavin searching for the left wing.
The left wing crash site.

As before we quickly searched the area and took our notes and photos.  Options and ideas were discussed for the upcoming troop outing and we made our way back to the trail-head.  There was no doubt in my mind that this outing was going to be the best of the year...

ASM Tom Moore, far right, talking with the scouts about troop outing options.

Links:

Two websites gave us the most information about the crash site and a starting point on where to find the wreckage.


and


There are other websites out there but these were the most helpful.

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