Listen Live

Historic water bomber making last flight to Victoria museum this year

The beloved Martin Mars water bomber on Sproat Lake will be making its final flight later this year.

The province announced today it’s committed a quarter-million-dollars to transport the airplane from Port Alberni to Victoria. There, it will become a permanent display at the BC Aviation Museum.

Transporting the nearly 80-year-old plane will be done in phases, including its final flight from Sproat Lake to the Saanich Inlet. There, it will be loaded on a trailer and transported to the museum by the Victoria airport.

The plane was last used in 2015 to fight forest fires in BC, Alberta and the USA. It will take approximately 10,000 hours of prep and flight retraining over the next six months to move the plane to its new home.

A final date for the move has not been set, but the province expects it will be done by the end of this year.

Continue Reading

cjsu Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

B.C. airports brace for Air Canada flight attendant strike

Airports in B.C. are bracing for travel disruptions after the union representing 10,000 Air Canada flight attendants issued 72-hour strike notice Wednesday.

RCMP seek witnesses, dashcam video after woman injured near Youbou

The Lake Cowichan RCMP is asking witnesses, or anyone with dashcam video of an incident where a beer can was thrown at a woman, to come forward.

North Cowichan to begin repair work after erosion exposes watermains

North Cowichan will make emergency repairs after a large scour hole was discovered in June where two water mains cross the Cowichan River to supply drinking water to the south end of North Cowichan and Crofton.

Federal funding boosts research and Indigenous knowledge on wildfires

Ottawa is offering $45.7 million for projects in B.C. and across Canada that advance knowledge about wildfires. 

B.C. invests $35M in clean energy project fund

British Columbia is investing $35 million towards new clean energy projects, through the CleanBC Industry Fund. 
- Advertisement -