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El Aero crash, Ted McBride killed

littlejoe

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 19, 2011
Messages
1,635
Location
Montana, East Slope
Ted was a very neat guy, super pilot, had over 37,000 hours last time I flew with him.

On last trip, we were staking uranium outa Prescott, on way back to elko we landed for gas in St George, Utah---there was a fire burning on other side of mtns from there and Ted was gonna stop and do inspection on helicopter that was working for blm---flew thru this windy, windey canyon at about 80 knots--gave me a my buddy a spectacular ride--

Somehow I felt it might be the last one---but never thought it'd be on acct of something like this:

A veteran helicopter pilot killed in a crash during an aerial reseeding operation over wildfire-scarred federal land in eastern Nevada was mourned Tuesday by friends and officials, but his widow said he died happy.

"He died doing what he loved best," Rachel McBride said.

Teddy R. McBride, 74, known to everyone as Ted, retired in 2009 after more than 40 years piloting helicopters over northeastern Nevada for El Aero Services of Elko.

He still flew part time because customers wanted him, Rachel McBride said.

On Monday, McBride crashed while dusting seed across rugged terrain charred in late June by the more than 4-square-mile Pinto Fire some 50 miles west of Ely and 30 miles east of Eureka.

Sheriff's Capt. Scott Henriod said it appeared the Bell 206B clipped a power line before crashing about 3 p.m. Monday in a remote part of White Pine County.

NV Energy Corp. spokesman Karl Walquist said no customer outage occurred but crews were checking the 345-kilovolt transmission line for damage.

Ginna Reyes, president of El Aero Services, noted that McBride was using a dusting bin suspended by a cable from beneath the helicopter at the time of the crash.

The cause is being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board.

"This is a tragic event and we have lost a longtime integral part of our business," Reyes said. "We will all miss Ted McBride significantly."

McBride was one of only four El Aero Services helicopter pilots, Reyes said.

Lesli Ellis-Wouters, spokeswoman for the federal Bureau of Land Management in Elko, confirmed that McBride was at work on the Pinto Fire burn area when he crashed. She recalled McBride working in BLM seeding operations in previous winters.

"He worked with us many years in Ely and Elko," Ellis-Wouters said. "Many of the people here know him. We're very saddened and our hearts go out to his family."

Rachel McBride said a son lives in Sedona, Ariz., a stepdaughter lives in the Northern Nevada town of Orvada, and a stepson lives in Elko.

Ted McBride didn't want a funeral, Rachel McBride said. She said he'll be cremated and his ashes will be scattered in the Ruby Mountains of northeastern Nevada.
 
i posted this cause i thought with all the wild horse gathering, grass seeding, fire work that Ted did maybe some of the posters from nev, utah or wyoming had known/worked with him.
 

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