'Very good at everything': Nunavut residents remember pilot Natalie Gillis
CBC
Natalie Gillis is described by people who knew her as ambitious, joyful, talented and humble.
The 34-year-old died June 17 when her plane, a twin-engine Pier PA-31, crashed approximately three kilometres southwest of the Albany International Airport in New York.
She was working for Kasi Aviation, an airline in Montreal that specializes in aerial surveys and mapping services.
A pilot, photographer, and outdoor guide, Gillis filled her life with experiences that took her from the Arctic to the Antarctic, touching many people's lives along the way.
For a little over two years, she worked for Kenn Borek Air.
"There was nothing ever difficult about working with Nat," said Addison Gilpin-Payne, also a Kenn Borek pilot.
"In my opinion, there's people who work hard at their job to be good and then there's people who just have it. I think she was just naturally gifted at that."
Gilpin-Payne said she first met Gillis in 2022, and flew by her side many times, especially between Iqaluit and Kimmirutn Nunavut, and between Qikiqtarjuaq and Pangnirtung.
"I had never flown the 'Pang Pass' between Pangnirtung and Qikiqtarjuaq. Here I am, now, flying with somebody who's done it on foot [...] many times. It was like, cool, almost like having my own personal tour guide on board with me."
It was her passion for the outdoors that brought Gillis to Nunavut many times throughout her 20s.
According to her LinkedIn profile, she has guided hiking, sea kayaking and whitewater canoeing expeditions in Greenland and in the High Arctic, including Ellesmere Island, Axel Heiberg Island, Bylot Island and Ellesmere Island.
"It was always a lot of fun to work with Natalie. I learned very fast that she was […] very good at everything," said Micheil Cameron Hill, a friend and former colleague of Gillis when she worked for outdoor company Black Feather.
Cameron Hill has many fond memories of working with Gillis during expeditions through Auyuittuq and Quttinirpaaq National Parks.
"She had a very calm energy most of the time, kind of understated and low-key. If you weren't paying attention, you didn't quite notice that her backpack was the size of a small refrigerator when she would hike," Cameron Hill said.