I did my "normal" Galana run today (albiet now there are high winds everywhere).
Anyway, when we landed there was an R44 parked on the ramp with a website on the side (I was sure it was
www.helicopters.org but that doesn't seem to go to much of a site so I must have misread it unfortunately).
A lady and two guys in flight suits were around it. At the time they were wanting to pump avgas into a 5 gallon can to put in their helicopter and then fill up the can again for spare fuel (so 10 gallons... this as I'm pumping 200 gallons of Jet A into our 1900).
Now, Galena is literally in the middle of nowhere. Absolute nowhere. There's nothing there but some natives (well and the associated infrastructure to support them), moose, bears, and billions of mosquitos (although fortunately with the low water they aren't too bad right now).
Being that this is the case and they were very obviously "not from around here." I asked them what they were up to. They are from Europe and flew (from the sound of it) across Canada into Alaska to Deadhorse (Prudhoe Bay) and then South from there... I still don't know why they stopped in Galena instead of just going to Fairbanks since they are about the same distance from Deadhorse (I also believe they took a day and flew to Barrow and back to Deadhorse so they covered the northern tip of Alaska). Then they are going to fly down from Alaska, through Canada again, through the continental US and down to the southern tip of South America and back. Apparently they are trying to set a world record for helictopters and they are doing all of this in the piston engine R44. They are 3 weeks into a trip that they estimate will end up taking 3 months.
I can't find a website talking about the trip, but will keep searching. And I still think I'd prefer to pick up a turbine engined helicopter for that kind of trip...