HIS MEDICAL CERTIFICATE HAD BEEN SUSPENDED. BUT TO JOHN DENVER, THE SKY WAS THE ONLY PLACE HE FELT TRULY FREE—AND HE TOOK OFF REGARDLESS OF THE COST. On October 12, 1997, in California, despite strict FAA regulations following two prior convictions, John Denver climbed into his Long-EZ—an experimental aircraft he had owned for less than a month. Federal rules were clear: without a valid medical certificate, he was not legally allowed to fly solo. The real tragedy, however, lay in a fatal design quirk: the fuel selector valve was positioned awkwardly behind the pilot’s left shoulder. To switch tanks mid-flight, a pilot had to twist their entire body. Witnesses on the beach saw the plane bank sharply before plunging into the Pacific. While the NTSB listed pilot error, the final plea his mechanic made to him that morning remains a secret the family has never released. John Denver lived and died in the skies he loved so much. How will you remember him: through the peaceful “Country Roads” or the sweet “Annie’s Song”? 🎸🏔️
John Denver’s Final Flight: The Morning That Still Feels Unfinished October 12, 1997. Monterey Peninsula Airport, California. The morning began quietly, with the kind of coastal calm that makes flying…