Up where she belongs: New Sask. pilot hopes to inspire future female Indigenous aviators - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Up where she belongs: New Sask. pilot hopes to inspire future female Indigenous aviators

A chance meeting prompted Saskatchewan's Daniella Pettiti to quit her job at age 30 and now she's a licensed pilot who graduated through an Indigenous flight school.

A chance encounter changed the course of Daniella Pettiti's life, sending her from the lab to the skies

Daniella Pettiti flew over Toronto as part of her training in Ontario. Next, she said she wants to learn how to be a flight instructor. (Submitted by Daniella Pettiti)

A chance meeting prompted a Saskatchewan woman quit her job atage 30and now she's alicensed pilot who recently graduated throughan Indigenous flight school.

Daniella Pettiti is Cree from the Waterhen Lake First Nation, in northwestern Saskatchewan. She was born in Saskatoon and grew up in northern Alberta. Her first time on an airplane was when she was in high schoolin Prince Albert, Sask., after a friend invited her to come on board.

"I just thought it was so amazing to be up," Pettiti said. "And I was watching [the pilot] as he was doing all his work before we took off and when we took off, and I just thought it just seemed so easy, and I thought 'This is something I could do.'"

But she didn't pursue her dreams of flying at that point.

"When you're a young teen girl you think you're not smart enough. That it won't happen. So I kind of gave up on it."

Over a decade later, Pettiti was working as a medical lab assistant in Calgary and said she kept running into people in the aviation field. She said she started seeing it as a sign.

And then came a five-minute chat with a pilot a clientwho came into the lab where she worked.

"I remember the last thing he said to me was, 'Do you think people meet each other for a reason?' And I said, 'Yeah, I do,'" said Pettiti.

"It was definitely that guy I have no idea who he washe definitely changed my path."

Daniella Pettiti graduated from the First Nations Technical Institute in May 2018. (Submitted by Daniella Pettiti)

The unknown pilotleft an envelope for Pettiti with a co-worker. Inside was$500.

"I registered for ground school at Springbank Airport [in Alberta] the following day and I started classes three weeks later," she said, working evening to help pay for her classes.

Last May, Pettitigraduated from the three-year aviation diploma program at Ontario's First Nations Technical Institute.

"It wasn't like other flight schools where I hear it's quite competitive between the students. It's so small that everyone becomes like family including the instructors," she said.

"I honestly believe if I went to any other school I most likely wouldn't have made it."

1st flight

Pettiti said her parents were worried when she first took her new life direction but they came around to the idea.

"Once I got there and started school they were really proud," she said. "And my mom was very excited and happy. I actually took her for her first flight on my graduation day."

She also remembers her own first solo flight.

"The first flight I went on my own I was definitely scared," she said.

"I just imagined my instructor her name was Alison I just imaged she was beside me the entire time so then I felt like I was not alone."

Daniella Pettiti said the flight school instructors helped lift her up through difficult days during the three-year diploma program. (Submitted by Daniella Pettiti)

Pettiti is nowback in Saskatchewan, working inMeadow Lake and saving up to go back to school to become a flight instructor. After that, she hopes to fly upnorth in the summer and somewhere tropicalin the winter.

She also hopesseeing a female Indigenous pilot willinspire younger girls to consideraviation.

"When they come to watch the planes and they see an Indigenous girl walking up to the plane and it turns out she's flying the plane, I think that would spark some sort of fire inside them."

With files from the Morning Edition