Maurice Kirk Rescued Up After Ditching Cub In
Caribbean
It's likely the end for
a storied aircraft... but it could have been far, far worse.
Eccentric adventurer Maurice Kirk was successfully rescued
Saturday, after he was forced to ditch his prized "Liberty Girl"
restored Piper Cub in the Caribbean.
Kirk, 62, was forced to make an emergency landing in the WWII
spotter plane, reports The London Times, due to a reported engine
problem. The New Zealand Rescue Co-ordination Centre picked up on
Kirk's emergency locator beacon, and alerted the US Coast Guard in
Miami to send a helicopter.
Search crews found Kirk near dusk, sitting on the floating
wreckage of his aircraft about 80 miles off the Dominican coast. He
suffered a cut to his head, but otherwise appeared to be OK. He was
taken to a hospital on the island of Providenciales, in the Turks
and Caicos islands, as a precaution.
USCG Petty Officer Nick Ameen said Kirk's decision to equip the
Cub with an ELT "may well have saved his life. That was a really
good decision on his part."
As ANN reported, Kirk
restored the 1943 Piper -- reportedly once flown by WWII General
George S. Patton -- in Maine last year. The aircraft was damaged in
2005 when Kirk crashed in Kanazawa, Japan, after travelling
three-quarters around the world. The airplane was subsequently
impounded by Japanese authorities, but was released back to Kirk in
December 2006.

Kirk had spent the past several weeks flying the "Liberty Girl"
around the Caribbean. As a precaution, he sprayed the aircraft with
shark repellent in case he was forced to make a water landing, said
Kirk's wife Kirstie. "I was warned that the outcome of these things
is usually not very good, but I told them my husband is
indestructible," Kirstie Kirk added, after hearing the news her
husband had been forced to ditch the plane.
"He had an engine stop and I think he must have glided it down,"
she told the South Wales Echo. "He cut himself free and got out
through the cockpit. He had a lifeboat with him, but it did leak a
bit."

Kirk has a decidedly colorful history. The self-described
"Flying Vet" was actually expelled from the Royal College of
Veterinary Surgeons in May 2002, after being convicted 11 times on
a range of charges from driving offenses to assault. According to
his website, Kirk was mugged during a stop in Cuba last
week.
Kirstie Kirk said her husband will likely take to the skies
again -- although almost certainly not in the Cub --
despite a decidedly mixed string of luck.
"He's more concerned about his beloved plane than he is for his
own health," she said. "I don’t think I would be able to
influence him" to give up flying, she added.
IDENTIFICATION
Regis#: GKIRK
Make/Model: J3
Description: J-3 Cub (L-4, NE)
Date: 02/16/2008 Time: 2229
Event Type: Accident Highest Injury:
None Mid Air: N Missing:
N
Damage: Destroyed
LOCATION
DESCRIPTION
AIRCRAFT REPORTED A MAYDAY AND CRASHED INTO THE OCEAN 76
MILES OFF THE
COAST OF PUERTO RICO, NEAR THE ROVIDENCIALES IN THE TURKS,
CAICOS ISLAND IN
THE CARIBBEAN, THE ONE PERSON ON BOARD WAS RESCUED BY THE US
COAST GUARD
INJURY DATA Total
Fatal: 0
# Crew: 1 Fat:
0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
# Pass: 0 Fat:
0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
# Grnd:
Fat: 0 Ser:
0 Min:
0 Unk:
WEATHER: NOT REPORTED
OTHER DATA
Activity: Unknown Phase:
Unknown Operation: OTHER
FAA FSDO: SOUTH FLORIDA, FL
(SO19)
Entry date: 02/19/2008