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HALF MOON BAY – A pilot and self-professed thrill seeker said Wednesday he was forced to bring his new plane down into the ocean off Northern California as it lost power, recording dramatic videos as he and his passenger treaded water in the chilly ocean awaiting rescue.
Pilot David Lesh, a 34-year-old globe-trotting skier and the founder of Colorado-based outerwear company Virtika, had embarked on the flight Tuesday over Half Moon Bay, south of San Francisco.
#NEW WATCH the moment the aircraft hit water. Pilot tells me he just got the plane a few weeks ago. He was in the middle of a photo shoot over the coast, when plane lost power. Says there was no real impact, he was able to skip the aircraft along the water. Amazing. #abc7now pic.twitter.com/Sedd5E4cRt
— Amanda del Castillo (@AmandaABC7) August 21, 2019
His plan was for friends in a second plane to photograph the first real trip of his single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza propeller plane with views of the coastline and Golden Gate Bridge to complement photos on his Instagram account showing him flying, skiing and snowmobiling worldwide. He had purchased the plane less than three months ago.
Lost Power Over the Water
The plan was scrapped when the plane lost power while flying at 3,000 feet (915 meters).
“I just did everything I could to get the motor going again,” Lesh said. “Nothing was working.”
He reached out to Owen Leipelt, the pilot of the second plane carrying the photographer.
“David radioes to me that he’s lost engine power,” Leipelt said. “When you hear that, you think, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa, what did I just hear, say that again.'”
Lesh said his plane “skipped along the water” for a few hundred feet without much of an impact. He and his passenger grabbed window shades and seat cushions to help them float in the water teeming with jellyfish as whales breached the surface nearby.
Leipelt, 20, of San Jose called air traffic control for help and circled over the two people in the water.
Plane Sank in Less Than a Minute
The Coast Guard dispatched two aircraft, a cutter and a patrol boat. Videos show a helicopter hoisting the soaked Lesh and his passenger out of the water about 20 minutes after the plane went down.
While in the water, Lesh filmed himself and his friend with his water-resistant cellphone as the plane sank in under a minute.
“There she goes!” he says in one video as the tail bobs in the water.
#NEW The last time David Lesh saw any part of his Beech Craft Bonanza. #abc7now pic.twitter.com/FA3rSKbSMb
— Amanda del Castillo (@AmandaABC7) August 21, 2019
In the clip, Lesh speculates about its fuel. On Wednesday, he blamed bad gasoline for the malfunction, saying he had siphoned particulate matter out of the gas but thinks he didn’t get all of it.
The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating.
Lesh said he bought the plane for more than $200,000 and spent about $40,000 for upgrades. He said he took a loan out to pay for the plane.
Pilot Planning Next Flight
Addressing online speculation that he had staged the water landing, Lesh said anyone who believed he would spend so much money on a plane only to sink it must have “lost their mind.”
Asked for specifics about insurance, Lesh said he had “airplane insurance” and quickly hung up.
Lt. Cmdr. Joshua Murphy said the quick reporting of the incident by Leipelt “greatly aided the Coast Guard’s prompt response and ability to save two lives.”
Luck also helped, Leipelt said.
“The seas were very calm, it was daytime,” he said.
Lesh said he plans to leave Friday on a cross-country flight to deliver his other plane to a buyer on the East Coast. He said he’s not worried about the trip.
“I’ll always fly,” he said.