Flight is such a broad and deep topic. It has shaped historic moments, like the Berlin Airlift, or the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It’s part of our mythology, take Icarus and Pegasus, and even in our faith, where angels and doves symbolize higher ideals.

When I first set foot in Aishalton, I brought with me a convenient dichotomy: the miners as villains, the villagers as victims. But the truth is far more complex. The miners, many of them actually themselves Indigenous peoples (and some even Aishalton villagers) are not only plunderers, they are also survivors, navigating a harsh reality in which environmental exploitation often feels like the only way out. And the villagers, far from being passive, are changing too — trying to become true stewards of the forest, armed with a professional grasp of aviation tech. It has become a story about two ways of living, each struggling to survive.

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