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In The Event of a Water Landing... Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

RedHiker: Archiving this cache as the cache owner hasn't logged in for more than a year and this geocache has been unavailable or unfound for quite a while.

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RedHiker
Volunteer Reviewer Northern California

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Hidden : 11/17/2006
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

This hide highlights a little known bit of park and aviation history.

At 09:20:54 on the morning of November 22, 1968, Japan Airlines Flight 2, a DC-8 named 'Shiga" with 96 passengers and a crew of 11, was cleared for final approach to San Francisco airport (SFO). As the weather was a typical Bay Area low, heavy overcast, 15-year veteran pilot Kohhei Asoh elected an instrument landing. He engaged his autopilot's Instrument Landing System (ILS), which would allow SFO's approach locator to control the plane's touchdown.

At 09:24:25, JAL 2 landed - three miles short of the SFO runways, and a quarter mile offshore of where you are standing. By a miracle, it was precisely on the shallow Coyote Point Reef. The DC-8 came to rest with its landing gear in the bottom mud, and the main door above water. There were no injuries on board, and the passengers and crew were evacuated using a combination of onboard rafts, the harbor's skiff, and rescue boats from the Yacht Club. Most passengers didn't even get their feet wet, according to news reports at the time.

The NTSB accident report (PDF) states the pilot had failed to correctly acquire the SFO locator when engaging the autopilot, which flew the plane into the water. This was fortunately one of the very few 'water landings' where all of those on board walked away.

The DC-8 itself suffered only minor damage. In two days, it was hoisted from the water by cranes and barged to United Airlines' facilities at SFO. Since it had only been in service for four months, it was decided to repair the aircraft. The four month project cost $4 million, and included replacing all of the 36 miles of wiring in the plane, and removing and repairing or replacing all of the control surfaces, hydraulics, and most of the A/C and pneumatic systems. The DC-8 rejoined JAL's fleet in March 1969, and continued in service for the next 14 years. In 1983 it was sold off by JAL, and then flew passengers for several no-name airlines, winding up in Nigeria.

But in 1987 Airborne Express purchased the plane and returned it to US service as a freighter. Amazingly, it continued to fly until December 2001. The 9/11 attacks indirectly finished off the venerable DC-8, hull #45954. With plenty of more modern aircraft sitting unused, there was no support for another refurbishment of the now 33-year-old plane, and it went to the scrappers. For more details on both the accident and aircraft, see here. (Thanks to stevegt for pointing out this site.) Two further descriptions are here and here.

The location is next to the Coyote Point Yacht Club parking lot, which can be accessed via Coyote Point Park (limited hours). There is an admission fee during the summer and weekends. Or, you can park for free at Ryder Park to the south, and walk or bike up the Bay Trail.

As of 4/18/10, this is now a camo'ed largish micro-cache. We'll see if it survives the cleanup crews poking around in the bushes.

(In honor of the Rogue Ramblers.)

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Jngpu lbhe urnq!

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)