You should join the Seaplane Pilots Association and pick up their Water Landing Directory (http://www.seaplanes.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=41&Itemid=68). Every state's rules are different, and even local administrative areas (cities, town, townships, etc.) can have their own rules. The Water Landing Directory is the only source I know of for this kind of info.
-- Robert
On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 10:48 AM, Mark <markiv200@att.net> wrote:
I know that lakes built here in the US by the Army Corp of Engineers are off limits for landing. But beyond that about all I've heard is that you need permission from the lakeowner on private property, which sounds reasonable for little private lakes. Yes I know that Alaska is pretty much a mecca for float planes.(haven't studied details) But a CFI told me the other day that rivers were often a good spot.
If it's fairly restrictive then that pretty much takes away any ideas of cross-country spontaneity doesn't it. I don't think sectional maps would be much help either. The FAA doesn't concern itself with matters once you're out of the air. I guess you just have to be fast enough to outrun the game warden, huh? LOL!
It would be nice to land on the water, then camp on a lake beach.
---
Mark
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