Fuel loss lands plane in Fountain field

May 28, 2009 - 9:18 PM
THE GAZETTE

(Christian Murdock/The Gazette)
Al Uhalt walks away from his AVI Husky plane that Uhalt landed in a field near Fountain Valley School after it ran out of fuel while trying to land at the Colorado Springs Airport Thursday, May 28, 2009 .

To say that Al Uhalt has been around the aviation community would be an understatement.

From 1977 to 1979, the retired Air Force colonel commanded the 46th Aerospace Defense Wing at Peterson Air Force Base. For decades he has been a flight instructor, owning his own school and even serving on the city's airport advisory board.

Perhaps this kind of history makes Thursday's incident just a little embarrassing.

His plane ran out of gas.

Uhalt and 16-year-old flight student Kyle Sundman were up for a 45-minute lesson in an Aviat Husky single-engine plane. About 10 a.m. they were cleared to land at the Colorado Springs Airport when the engine started sputtering. Uhalt took a look at the gas gauge and knew exactly what was wrong. Luckily, they were approaching the Fountain Valley Schoo.

"Obviously we were having a problem and I saw this field, a pretty nice field, and we landed. As simple as that," Uhalt said.

The landing was bumpy, but no one was hurt and the plane was not damaged. The plane is designed to make landings just like this, he said.

"I'm just embarrassed that apparently we ran out of fuel," he said.

The plane is owned by Kyle's grandfather, Jim Young. He was flying another plane behind and saw the whole thing. With Uhalt's experience, he said he wasn't worried about the landing.

"I've landed that plane on fields like this on purpose," Young said.

He laughed off the landing but Uhalt was a little more serious about it.

"It's my fault and I don't shrug this off lightly," he told Young.

Neither does the Federal Aviation Administration, which has been notified about the unscheduled landing, but isn't likely to do more than remind Uhalt to check the gas tank and kick the tires before taking off next time.