Stuart Linklater |
A pilot who has completed the world's shortest scheduled flight more than 12,000 times is taking to the skies over Orkney for the final time.
Stuart Linklater, 59, will make his final trip on the route between Westray and Papa Westray.
Mr Linklater, a senior pilot with Loganair, is retiring from the Orkney inter-isle service after 24 years in the job.
During his time on the inter-isle routes - which also includes flights to Stronsay, Sanday, North Ronaldsay and Eday - the Orkney-based pilot has chalked up more than 1.3 million miles in the single-manned, eight-seater Britten-Norman Islander aircraft used on the service.
The journey is approximately 1.5 miles long and is thought to be a shorter distance than the runway at Edinburgh Airport.
Mr Linklater, who will continue working part-time for Loganair operating aircraft out of Glasgow, said: "I've thoroughly enjoyed my time on the Orkney inter-isle service and have worked with and carried so many interesting people over the 24 years I've spent piloting the Islander.
"There's nothing quite like the experience of taking the Islander up and I will look back fondly on my years spent flying between the islands over the years. Flying the Islander in some of the most challenging weather conditions in Scotland means I've had my fair share of turbulence over the years, but I've enjoyed every minute of it."
Mr Linklater joined Loganair after gaining his private pilot license in 1982 and his commercial pilot's license in 1988, and has worked with the airline for 25 years, 16 of them as part of the company's then air ambulance service contract. He has flown enough miles to circumnavigate the globe 50 times.
Loganair said he can also lay claim to the record for the amount of times he has flown the world's shortest scheduled flight and holds the record for the time taken to travel between the two islands - 53 seconds.
Loganair president Scott Grier said: "Those of us based at Loganair's headquarters in Glasgow always had peace of mind knowing that Stuart Linklater was very much in control of the specialist flying operations in Orkney, whether North Isles scheduled services, or the many years of ambulance missions."
Story and Photo: http://www.independent.ie
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