Will Perform Over Six Canadian Cities During 11-Week Deployment
Final preparations are being made for the Royal Air Force Aerobatic Team's biggest-ever tour to North America, which includes performance or flypasts over 6 Canadian cities.
Aviation fans in Halifax, Ottawa-Gatineau, Toronto, Niagara Falls, Vancouver, and Victoria will have a unique opportunity to see the Red Arrows take flight during the team's 11-week deployment, which is aimed at showcasing the U.K. at its best, and supporting trade, business and defence interests.
The first public event of the tour will be a flypast with aircraft from the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) over the historic Halifax waterfront on Sunday, August 11. This will be followed on August 13 by a flypast of Parliament Hill in Ottawa, and an aerobatic display in Gatineau.
After visiting a number of cities in the US, the Red Arrows will return to Canada to appear at the Canadian International Airshow in Toronto over the Labour Day weekend. Later in September, they'll return to Canada again for a special flypast over Vancouver Harbour and Victoria, British Columbia.
"I am absolutely thrilled to have the world famous Red Arrows in Canada this summer," said British High Commissioner to Canada Susan le Jeune d'Allegeershecque. "This tour is an excellent opportunity to not only showcase the Red Arrows' aerobatic expertise to Canadians from the Atlantic to the Pacific, but also to celebrate the close and enduring relationship between our two countries."
"Tours by the Red Arrows have always been an important role of the team – aiming to demonstrate RAF expertise, helping to highlight U.K. excellence across a range of sectors and celebrating close connections with friends and allies," said Wing Commander Andrew Keith, Officer Commanding, Royal Air Force Aerobatic Team.
"With only days to go before the Red Arrows depart for North America, and with more tour locations now being released, all of us in the team hope people across Canada will be able to join us in the coming weeks and enjoy one of our displays, flypasts or events."
It is the first time the Red Arrows have been to Canada and the US since 2008, with the deployment of the most ambitious tour of North America ever undertaken by the team. With stops across the continent, in addition to the Canadian stops, the tour comprises a combination of nearly 20 aerobatic displays, several iconic flypasts and 100 separate ground engagement activities – from business receptions led by the U.K. Department for International Trade to sessions aimed at inspiring young people.
Each show in Canada will be a demonstration of creativity, engineering excellence and innovation – not just hallmarks of the Red Arrows and RAF but of the proven capabilities, strengths and skills of the U.K..
Moreover, the tour provides the chance to celebrate and enhance international trade between the U,K, and Canada, which was worth more than £20 billion ($24.3 billion) in the four quarters to the end of Q1 2019, an increase of more than 17% from the same period in 2018.
"The men and women of the Red Arrows epitomize the skill, agility, teamwork and precision of the RAF and we are relishing the opportunity to travel overseas, display in front of hundreds of thousands of people and be ambassadors for a Global Britain," said Wing Commander Keith. "A key aim of the tour is to inspire people through safe, dynamic and visually-exciting shows. However, we have also planned dozens of ground events, where we hope to meet countless individuals and showcase the importance of science, technology, engineering and math – the STEM subjects – in our work."
Planning for the North American tour has spanned more than a year, and technical equipment and other resources have already been shipped to key "hub" locations in the US and Canada, in advance of the jets setting off from RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire, in August.
"A huge amount of energy has gone into preparing for this tour, involving detailed work by specialists from across the RAF and liaising closely with colleagues from the U.K.'s Department for International Trade, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and partners in Canada and the United States," said Wing Commander Keith.
The team's Hawk jets, which cannot refuel in the air and do not have the range to make the transatlantic crossing in one sortie, will be flown via several stops, including Scotland, Iceland and Greenland, to reach Halifax – the first major location of the tour.
(Images provided with Red Arrows news release and from file)