Ultimate Aviation Gift? A Ride With The Baltic Bees Jet Team

Published on: December 21, 2016 at 8:32 PM

What holiday gift do you get the aviation fan that has everything? A ride with an aerobatic jet team!

The Latvian aerobatic jet demonstration team, The Baltic Bees are an impressive private jet team, operating six L-39โ€™s flown by pilots with combined civilian and military jet experience including two pilots with time in MiG-21โ€™s and one pilot named โ€œRobโ€ who, according to their website, lists โ€œU.S. Air Force Academyโ€ as his education.

The team started in 2008 and added aircraft until they reached their current six-ship formation. A review of their official videos show they maintain some impressively precise close-formation aerobatics and sensational low altitude maneuvers along with dramatic opposing passes seen by the top military jet teams.

Even the dark-blue and yellow striped livery of the aircraft is well conceived for visibility during most demonstration weather conditions and makes for good photography from the ground.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1b5Bg_YdGg&w=706&h=397&align=left]

What makes the Baltic Bees particularly interesting these days is the fact that they sell a 20-minute aerobatic ride in their Aero-Vodochody L-39C Albatross single engine, subsonic light-attack/trainer jets for about โ‚ฌ1,500.00 Euros (1,550 USD orย  1,261.00 GBP.)

The package includes a 40-minute ground school, and then youโ€™ll suit-up, strap-in and go for a ride with the jet team.

According to the teamโ€™s website, โ€œ[The] Flight starts with simple maneuvers with increasing difficulties during the flight. You will be given opportunity to fly the airplane (emphasis added) under supervision of our pilot-instructor.โ€

The charmingly novel description of the flight program on their little website leaves the impression that the program may be somewhatโ€ฆ โ€œopen-endedโ€ and, for a few extra dollars, pounds or euros perhaps you may be able to push the envelope a little more if you have the stomach for it, safety allowing, of course.

The site goes on to say they offer a video of your flight, clearly a must-have for such an occasion, and that, โ€œPhotos by the airplane before and after are free!โ€

The offer is surprisingly reasonable considering getting a ride with any jet demonstration team as a media observer, VIP or even paid guest is extremely difficult. In the U.S. the civilian jet demonstration team The Patriots, also operating the Aero L-39, show no such specific offer on their website.

The Breitling Jet Team of Dijon, France, another private jet demo team sponsored by the aviation specialty watchmaker Breitling and also flying the popular Aero L-39 offers no such โ€œpay to flyโ€ program.

The Breitling team does provide media and celebrity rides for publicity and brand promotion.

During their recent 2016 U.S. airshow tour it was tricky for media to arrange flights in advance with the Breitling team.

Traditionally only mainstream media personalities, sports or entertainment stars and local VIPโ€™s could score a coveted ride with large military jet teams like the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds and U.S. Navy Blue Angels. When you consider it costs up to $24,400 USD per hour to fly a Blue Angels F/A-18 according to IHS Janeโ€™s Defense, albeit in a much different type of aircraft, the $1,500 USD ride with the Baltic Bees seems like an incredible bargain.

Prospective passengers with the Baltic Bees are invited to fly with them from their base at Jลซrmala airport about 60 kilometers from the capital city of Riga, Latvia on the picturesque Gulf of Riga. If youโ€™re interested you can contact the team on their website at www.balticbees.com.

And, if you book a flight, tell them The Aviationist sent you!

Image credit: Filip Modrzejewski / Foto Poork

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Tom Demerly is a feature writer, journalist, photographer and editorialist who has written articles that are published around the world on TheAviationist.com, TACAIRNET.com, Outside magazine, Business Insider, We Are The Mighty, The Dearborn Press & Guide, National Interest, Russiaโ€™s government media outlet Sputnik, and many other publications. Demerly studied journalism at Henry Ford College in Dearborn, Michigan. Tom Demerly served in an intelligence gathering unit as a member of the U.S. Army and Michigan National Guard. His military experience includes being Honor Graduate from the U.S. Army Infantry School at Ft. Benning, Georgia (Cycle C-6-1) and as a Scout Observer in a reconnaissance unit, Company โ€œFโ€, 425th INF (RANGER/AIRBORNE), Long Range Surveillance Unit (LRSU). Demerly is an experienced parachutist, holds advanced SCUBA certifications, has climbed the highest mountains on three continents and visited all seven continents and has flown several types of light aircraft.
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