Charles M. Schulz - Sonoma County Airport
Encyclopedia : C : CH : CHA : Charles M. Schulz - Sonoma County Airport
{| class="infobox bordered" style="width: 220px; font-size: 95%;"
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! colspan="4" style="text-align: center; background-color: #4682B4; color: white;" |Charles M. Schulz -
Sonoma County Airport
-->|- !colspan="4" style="text-align: center; background-color: #4682B4; color: white;" |Runways |- !bgcolor="lightgrey" rowspan="2"|Direction !bgcolor="lightgrey" colspan="2"|Length !bgcolor="lightgrey" rowspan="2"|Surface |- !bgcolor="lightgrey"|ft !bgcolor="lightgrey"|m |- !align="left" valign="top"|14/32 |valign="top" align="right"|5,115 |valign="top" align="right"|1,559 |valign="top"|Asphalt |- !align="left" valign="top"|01/19 |valign="top" align="right"|5,002 |valign="top" align="right"|1,525 |valign="top"|Asphalt
Charles M. Schulz - Sonoma County Airport is an airport located a few miles northwest of Santa Rosa serving Sonoma County and the surrounding areas of Wine Country in California. The airport has 2 runways. Currently, it is exclusively used for general aviation, but has in the past and will in the future be served by commercial airlines. The last commercial airline service was by United Express and was cancelled due to low ridership, and recently Horizon Air planned on returning commercial aviation service to Santa Rosa by having flights to Seattle-Tacoma, and Los Angeles. All beginning on March 20th, 2007.
The airport is named after Charles M. Schulz, the famed cartoonist of the Peanuts comic strip. The airport's amusing logo features Snoopy in goggles and scarf, taking to the skies on top of his red doghouse.
Airline
- Alaska Airlines
- * Horizon Air (Los Angeles, Seattle/Tacoma) [begins March 20, 2007]
See also
External links
- [Sonoma County Airport Homepage]
- Resources for this airport:
- * AirNav [airport information for KSTS]
- * FlightAware [airport information] and [live flight tracker]
- * NOAA/NWS [current] and [historical] weather observations
- * SkyVector [aeronautical chart for KSTS]
- [Maps and aerial photos]
- * WikiSatellite view at [WikiMapia]
- * Street map from [MapQuest] or [Google Local]
- * Topographic map from [TopoZone]
- * Aerial image or topographic map from [TerraServer-USA]
- * Satellite image from [Google Maps] or [Microsoft Virtual Earth]
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