Worth Every Year: Taylor Flat Is Back

So, a backcountry airstrip in northeastern Utah just reopened after thirty years of sitting dormant — and the story of how it got there is one of the most aviation things I’ve ever read.

Taylor Flat Airstrip, identifier TF6, sits near the Green River in Daggett County. It’s remote in the way Utah backcountry tends to be remote — red canyon walls, scrubby desert brush, enormous sky. And for roughly three decades, it just… sat there. Unused. Off the charts for most practical purposes.

Now it’s back.

Thirty Years on the Ground

The effort to reopen TF6 started in 2023, when the Recreational Aviation Foundation and Utah Back Country Pilots began coordinating with the Bureau of Land Management and Daggett County. What followed was a full NEPA environmental assessment, a right-of-way lease application, a public comment period — the whole process. Three years of navigation through the kind of bureaucratic terrain that would make most people quietly give up and go fly somewhere else.

They didn’t.

On May 9th, 25 volunteers showed up at Taylor Flat and got to work. Rocks off the runway. Ditches filled. New windsock pole installed. Runway corners, thresholds, and restricted areas marked. The next morning, RAF Ambassador John Clayton landed — the first aircraft to touch down at Taylor Flat in thirty years.

I read that and felt something. That’s the only way I can describe it. There’s a version of aviation that lives entirely in the machine — the systems, the procedures, the numbers. And then there’s this version; the one where people drive out to a patch of Utah desert on a Saturday and pull rocks out of the ground because they believe a dirt strip is worth saving.

Cleared for the Approach (Eventually)

Now — the original strip was 4,300 feet. During the restoration, the runway was shortened to 2,500 feet. A displaced threshold was added on the east end to avoid disturbing a sensitive environmental area near the river.

Haebin and I didn’t make it out there ourselves — but we made a comic about it, because some stories just ask for that treatment.

About That Sensitive Area…

In all seriousness — from everything I’ve seen of Utah backcountry, the landscape out there is genuinely beautiful. The kind of place that makes the paperwork feel, in retrospect, like a reasonable price of admission.

But the sensitive area does sound remarkably like all of it. Utah has a way of making every patch of scrub feel equally significant and equally indistinguishable from the next one. So does bureaucracy, in its own way. Haebin had thoughts. Marc — fictional Marc, standing in that imaginary desert — was unbothered.

The Real Payload

What strikes me most about this story isn’t the runway length or the environmental review. It’s the three years.

That’s a long time to stay committed to a piece of ground that isn’t serving anyone yet. RAF Liaison Wendy Lessig drove that process — following through on the public review from beginning to end, keeping it moving when it would have been easy to set it aside and call it done.

That persistence is the story. The reopening is just what happens when the persistence doesn’t stop.

If you want to read the full account, AVweb covered it well: Taylor Flat Airstrip Reopens In Utah

And if you’ve got TF6 — or any Utah backcountry strip — in your logbook or on your list, I’d love to hear about it. Drop it in the comments or come find us in the Discord.

Worth every year.