Seair Seaplanes

Seair Seaplanes is a scheduled and charter airline based in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada. The airline flies routes between the Vancouver International Water Airport and the Nanaimo Harbour Water Airport, as well as other Gulf Islands in the Strait of Georgia, primarily with float planes.

Seair Seaplanes
A DHC-2 Beaver at a dock in Vancouver
IATA ICAO Callsign
- SS1 -
Founded1980[1]
AOC #5082[2]
HubsVancouver Int'l Water Airport
Fleet size14[3]
Destinations9[4]
HeadquartersRichmond, British Columbia, Canada
Key peoplePeter Clarke, CEO[5]
Websitewww.seairseaplanes.com

Destinations

DHC-2T "Turbo Beaver" unloading at Ganges Harbour

As of September 2019 Seair Seaplanes serves the following destinations:[4]

In addition to scheduled flights, Seair operates scenic flights, scheduled tours, and private charters. Small amounts of cargo may also be carried.

Seair had plans to begin a service to the Victoria Inner Harbour Airport on May 25, 2011,[6] but the service did not debut.

Fleet

As of September 2019 the Seair fleet consists of 14 aircraft equipped with floats:[3]

Seair Seaplanes
AircraftNumberVariantsNotes
Cessna 185 Skywagon1A185F3 passengers
Cessna 208 Caravan79 passengers
DHC-2 Beaver6DHC-2 MK. I, DHC-2 MK. III

Accidents

On 28 December 1999, a Cessna C-208 Caravan (C-FGGG) operated by Seair crashed shortly after takeoff from the Abbotsford International Airport. The aircraft was destroyed and the pilot received serious injuries. Two passengers were also seriously injured and three passengers received minor injuries.[7]

On 22 September 2000, a DHC-2T Turbo Beaver (C-FOES) operated by Seair crashed 18 nautical miles northwest of Clearwater, British Columbia. The two occupants were seriously injured and the aircraft was destroyed.[8]

On 29 November 2009, a DHC-2 Beaver operated by Seair crashed off the coast of Saturna Island. The accident occurred at approximately 4:10 p.m local time. Six passengers (including one infant) died, but the pilot and one other passenger survived.[9][10][11]

On 26 July 2019, a Cessna 208 Caravan (C-GURL) registered to Seair crashed near Addenbroke Island, about 100 km (62 mi) north of Port Hardy. There were nine passengers on board and one pilot. Three passengers and the pilot were killed and five passengers suffered serious injuries.[12][13][14]

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gollark: You might have to contend with running out of usable energy in 10^lots years or something, I suppose.
gollark: The inevitable end point of "no growth/no new stuff/etc" is just "society runs through all available resources, can't get more, dies out" or maybe "natural disaster occurs and limited economic/technological resources don't allow dealing with it well".
gollark: This is why I don't like the "zero-growth" people, as well as the various other reasons.
gollark: > basic reading comprehension: surprisingly uncommonIndeed. People often just treat information related to computers or general technical stuff they don't know much about as utterly unfathomable, when it... isn't.

See also

References

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