they operate out of a 2000' runway without problems
Wow - that would require some pretty low density altitudes
and some pretty sharp flying - and no obstacles! That's the
only real complaint I have about the Cherokees - their Hershey
bar wing does not work very well at higher angles of attack.
You slow it down, and the drag sucks you down. Hopefully
to a good place to land on, because even full power may not
be enough to stop the descent on the back side of the power
curve.
A guy I know, tried to take a Cherokee off a short grass strip
on a hot day a few years back. Crashed, and it actually burned.
Crushed the vertebrae of a friend of mine who was pax. Took
him years to recover (fusing operations) he's still not the same.
It is the visiting Cessnas that have trouble
Well, the Cessna pilots need to have about one tenth the
skill of your Cherokee pilots! We have a grass strip at my
home airport, parallel the paved runway. It's 1000 feet long,
and I happily land the 172 on it and easily get it stopped with
lots left over.
The long, tapered Cessna wing, IMHO, works far better at
high alpha (and on short strips) than the Cherokee Hershey
bar wing.
Short fields ops seems to be something of a lost art for
many pilots - they're used to landing on very long runways,
so they get sloppy with their takeoff and landing technique,
and end up using a lot more runway than they really need to.
Case in point: today I landed a Pitts (not known as a short
field performer) at Peterborough, Ont (CYPQ) which has a
7000 foot runway. Despite the threshold of 27 being displaced,
I was stopped and turned off at the first intersection, which
is 1600 feet according to the CAP diagram.
It seems to be SOP for so many pilots to approach much too
fast, and float for at least the first 1000 feet of the runway.
I wince when I see someone try to force an aircraft onto
the runway.