Baseball and the Toronto Island Airport

Photo of Babe Ruth

Toronto City Centre Airport (commonly called “Toronto Island”) is a great airport for baseball fans, since it’s only about a 15-minute walk from the Roger’s Centre/Skydome, where you can drop by to see the Jays play the Bosox, Yankees, etc.

It turns out that the airport has an even closer connection to baseball. The Boston Red Sox signed Babe Ruth in 1914, but sent him down to their triple-A Providence Grays farm team for the 1914 season. Late that season, on September 5, when the Grays were playing the Toronto Maple Leafs baseball team at Island Stadium in Toronto, Ruth hit his first professional home run, pounding the ball right out into the waters of Toronto Harbour. The next year, the Bosox called Ruth up to the majors, and he famously hit his first major league home run — but not his first professional home run — against the Yankees on May 6, 1915.

Meanwhile, the [baseball] Leafs decided to move their stadium north to a mainland location, and in the 1930s, Toronto built its main airport on that empty land. After World War II, when longer runways and less fog became desirable, most airline operations into Toronto shifted northwest to the distant Malton airport (now Toronto Pearson International Airport), but the little airport built over the stadium where Babe Ruth started his professional home run hitting career is still in operation, still has airline traffic, and still sees lots of baseball fans passing through.

(Image via Wikipedia)

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Flying around Los Angeles

While I was in Pasadena on business this week, I rented a Piper Archer at El Monte Airport along with a glider-pilot friend (who sat in the back seat), and went up for 1.4 hours dual with an instructor late Wednesday afternoon.

It was easier getting around L.A. than other big cities because LAX‘s control zone is small, and the surrounding class B has generously high floors. We had no trouble getting VFR flight following for a local sightseeing flight during LAX’s dinnertime rush hour, though SoCal approach didn’t bother calling out most of the traffic we saw.

Smog

On the other hand, there was the smog. I’ve experienced the haze around big cities like Toronto or New York, but that did not prepare me for flying in L.A. and Orange counties late in the afternoon.

It was a good VFR day (CAVU for our intents) and from the ground, the sky looked, if not the brightest blue, blue all the same. At 3,500 feet, however, it was a different story — to the west, where the sun reflected off the smog, there was nothing but a wall of white, and I actually had to use the gyros from time to time (depending on our heading). When the smog was a little lower, it looked like a solid cloud layer, even though it was transparent looking up from the ground. I think it topped out around 4,000 feet.

Again

It was a great experience seeing L.A. from the air after spending so much time there on the ground in the late 1990s, consulting for McDonnell-Douglas/Boeing, and I plan to go up again the next time I’m in town. If I had a U.S. license, the FBO would let me rent the Archer without a checkout, based only on 90 days currency on my Warrior — an excellent deal. I don’t know if I have time to get a U.S. courtesy license, but it would be fun to fly up the coast to a different airport.

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How we navigate

This BBC story describes a study about how the human brain navigates.

On the street

They hooked up London cabbies to an fMRI machine, and observed which parts of their brain were active during different tasks while driving around London in a simulator. Here’s what they found:

Hippocamus
Initial route planning
Retroslenial cortex
Tracking the route in progress (waypoints, etc.)
Anterior prefrontal cortex
Planning diversions during the trip
Right lateral prefrontal cortex
Hazard detection (closed streets, etc.)
Medial prefrontal cortex
Tracking distance to destination

For example, as the cabbies got closer to their (virtual) destinations, the medial prefrontal cortex lit up more and more, like a DME counting down the distance to a VOR. Different parts of their brains performed social tasks like worrying about passengers.

In the air

These map very closely to the tasks a pilot performs, so it’s possible we’d see the same thing if a pilot in a simulator were hooked up to an fMRI: the right lateral prefrontal cortex would light up when watching for traffic or looking at bad weather ahead, the medial prefrontal cortex would show more and more activity as the pilot approached destination, etc.

It makes sense, then, that different people would show different relative strengths based on brain development — some might be very good at planning a route, but lousy at diversions; other people might hate planning, but be great at responding to unexpected problems en route. It’s a good argument against one size fits all for flight instruction.

Or then again, maybe flying is different. If anyone is looking for a great excuse to fit aviation into a grad school research project, here’s your chance …

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Talking to ATC: "you, me, where, what"

Talking to ATC makes some pilots nervous — especially if they trained at an uncontrolled airport — but it’s actually pretty simple as long as you take a second to think before you push the PTT button, and compose your message in advance using the simple, Tarzan-like pattern “you, me, where, what”:

  • who you (ATC) are
  • who I am
  • where I am
  • what I want

Just repeat to yourself “you, me, where, what”; “you, me, where, what”; “you, me, where, what”.

Examples

Consider this call for takeoff clearance:

Ottawa tower, Bravo Juliet Oscar short runway two two, ready for takeoff

Let’s break that down to “you, me, where, what”:

[you] Ottawa tower
[me] Bravo Juliet Oscar
[where] holding short runway two two
[what] ready for takeoff

It’s short, complete, and professional-sounding (but try to resist the temptation to deepen your voice and talk in a slow southern drawl). Here’s another one:

Boston Centre, Cherokee Canadian Charlie Foxtrot Bravo Juliet Oscar 5 miles north of the Massena VOR, request flight following

That breaks down to exactly the same pattern:

[you] Boston Center
[me] Cherokee Canadian Charlie Foxtrot Bravo Juliet Oscar (full form for the U.S.)
[where] 5 miles north of the Massena VOR
[what] request flight following

(If the frequency were busy, as it usually is with Boston Center, I’d break that down into two calls: an initial one with just the “you” and “me”, and a second with all the information when they called back and said “Bravo Juliet Oscar, go ahead your request”.)

Uncontrolled calls

Sound familiar? In fact, it’s exactly the same pattern you use in uncontrolled airspace:

Rockcliffe traffic, Cherokee Bravo Juliet Oscar five miles south at two thousand, crossing midfield to join the right downwind two seven

[you] Rockcliffe traffic
[me] Cherokee Bravo Juliet Oscar
[where] five miles south at two thousand
[what] crossing midfield to join the right downwind two seven

For uncontrolled airports, though, it’s often considered good manners to add an extra “you” at the end, because many airports may share the same frequency. A “you, me, where, what, you” pattern looks like this:

Rockcliffe traffic, Cherokee Bravo Juliet Oscar five miles south at two thousand, crossing midfield to join the right downwind two seven, Rockcliffe

Variations

If you’re just checking in with a new ATC unit after a handoff, the what is “checking in”, and you can usually leave that implied:

Toronto Centre, Bravo Juliet Oscar at six thousand

Here’s how it fits the pattern:

[you] Toronto Centre
[me] Bravo Juliet Oscar
[where] at six thousand (feet — to confirm that your encoder is working properly)
[what] (implied: “checking in”)

Alternatively, if an ATC unit already has you in visual or radar contact, you can leave out the where and just say the what:

Moncton Centre, Bravo Juliet Oscar request direct Fredericton VOR

[you] Moncton Centre
[me] Bravo Juliet Oscar
[where] (implied: “where you see me on radar”)
[what] request direct Fredericton VOR

Finally, standard IFR practice after a handoff to a new ATC unit is to add the what (“with you”) before the altitude, changing the order slightly:

Halifax terminal, Bravo Juliet Oscar with you at three thousand

[you] Halifax terminal
[me] Bravo Juliet Oscar
[what] with you
[where] at three thousand [feet]

That’s just because IFR pilots think they’re special.

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(Unofficial) Canadian NOTAMs via RSS

I have added an experimental, alpha-quality feature to OurAirports: local Canadian Airport NOTAMs via RSS (scraped from the Nav Canada web site). If anyone is interested in trying this out, you need to visit a Canadian airport’s page on the site and add “notams.rss” to the end of the URL, e.g.

http://www.ourairports.com/airports/CYVR/

becomes

http://www.ourairports.com/airports/CYVR/notams.rss

You can subscribe to this RSS 2.0 feed using any standard blog reader,such as Google Reader, filter and mash it up using Yahoo Pipes, etc.

Why it matters

The huge advantage of reading NOTAMs in a blog reader is that your reader remembers which ones you’ve already read. That way, when you plan a flight, you don’t have to reread the 20 NOTAMs you read for your flight three days ago. If a NOTAM has been modified, then it will appear as unread again.

Nav Canada and the FAA should deliver NOTAMs this way automatically, as an cheap, easy way to improve flight safety — it’s too easy to miss one important new NOTAM when reading through 20 old, stale ones for the umteenth time.

Caveats

Please read these — some of them are safety-related.

  • This is just an experiment, not a regular feature: I may either drop it or change the way it works at any time, so it wouldn’t be a good idea to build a production-grade web app that relies on it.

  • Airport NOTAMs only: FIC and HQ NOTAMs are not (yet) included.

  • These NOTAMs are scraped from Nav Canada, so any minor change in the way they format their web pages could break the system completely.

  • These may not be up to date, and some NOTAMs may be missing, so unfortunately, you still have to go to the official source before an actual flight; however, this feed will help you keep up to date from day to day on what’s happening in your area.

  • Larger airports have their own Nav Canada NOTAM files, but smaller airports are collected together into larger files. You’ll see the whole file for each airport, not just the specific airport you requested (that’s a design choice).

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OurAirports can geocode (!!)

Today I overhauled the search system in OurAirports to use Google’s free geocoding service. Geocoding takes an address like “Algonquin Park” or “1600 Pennsylvania Ave, Washington, DC” and converts it to a latitude and longitude — it doesn’t sound like much, but it completely changes the way you can use OurAirports.

Previously, you could search for a town or city in OurAirports only if that city had an airport; for example, you could find Smiths Falls, Ontario, but not Perth, Ontario. With geocoding, OurAirports shows the closest airports to any address, and that’s now the default search mode. You can also filter the search results to show only airports with scheduled airline service, only seaplane bases, etc.

For example, for a commercial air traveler, here are the closest airline airports to the Grand Canyon; for a film-star bush pilot, here are the closest seaplane bases to Hollywood, California.

There’s a lot more information, and many more examples, on the new search help page

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500 members

A special welcome to usndario, the 500th member to join OurAirports.

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CANPASS airport map

At my OurAirports account, I’ve added the tag canpass for all of the Canadian CANPASS-only airports. You can use my more general tag customs to see all airports I’ve tagged with customs services (canpass, airport-of-entry, and landing-rights). Zoom in to see specific areas.

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OurAirports-kapedia

OK, the name in the title sucks, but the good news is that OurAirports is now open to community contributions: any member can add a new airport or edit information about an existing one.

How to contribute

When you’re logged into your account (sign up here), you will now see an “edit” tab on every airport page, and an “add a new airport” link at the bottom of the left sidebar.

Think locally

OurAirports has excellent coverage for Canada, the U.S., and Brazil, but even then, we’re missing hundreds or thousands of private, unregistered landing fields. For other countries, the coverage is uneven, and errors and missing information always need correction. Now, if you live in Australia (for example), you can add missing Ozzie airports and correct or add information to existing ones, to make the site more useful for your fellow local pilots.

Checking changes

I’m keeping an individual change history for each airport, and can roll back any changes that look spammy or wrong. An amalgamated list of changes for all airports in inverse chronological order is available on the site-wide change page (also available as an RSS feed), and I’ll be grateful for help watching for any problems. I also plan to add Wikipedia-style watchlists soon, so that you can be alerted about changes on airports that interest you.

Open data

Remember that I won’t hoard your contributions — the site’s full airport list, with data, is available in CVS format for free, Public Domain download, and updated every night.

Unlike airport security …

I plan to keep things simple and open as long as our community is small and there aren’t any serious spam attacks. In the future, I can add moderation, recaptchas, etc. if necessary, but I don’t want to worry too much about problems that don’t actually exist yet.

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Finding a customs airport

I’ve expanded my original OurAirports tagging to include all airports of entry and U.S. landing rights airports that I can find under Canadian or U.S. control. You can now use my tag “customs” to find either, for trip planning purposes. Here’s the map zoomed in on the Vancouver/Seattle area, showing only airports where you can clear customs:

Map of customs airports near Vancouver and Seattle

Zoom out and drag to see other parts of Canada and the U.S., or start with the full customs map.

Note that some airports have only seasonal service and/or limited operating hours, and that U.S. “landing rights” airports sometimes charge a fee for customs services. I have not included CANPASS-only airports on the map, because they are available only to pilots who have preregistered in the CANPASS program. I have also excluded unofficial (but frequently-used) customs airports like Maxson Field and Sanderson Field that are located near border crossings.

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