Punch Dickins remained in France until March 1919 before he was demobilized and released from military service. He opted to return home with elements of the Canadian Expeditionary Force returning from an expedition to Siberia. Reaching Edmonton in May 1919, Dickins enrolled briefly in engineering at the
University of Alberta until he received an offer from General Motors. By 1921 Punch had been awarded a Commercial Air Pilot's Certificate (No.161) as well as the Air Engineer's Certificate (No. 213) by the Air Board. He joined the new
Royal Canadian Air Force in 1924 and served until 1927. As a veteran, Punch was assigned the rank of
Flying Officer. One of his first duties was to prepare a report for the Edmonton Post Office on the use of aircraft as mail carriers. As a test and demonstration pilot, he was charged with the service introduction of the new
Armstrong Whitworth Siskin fighter. Leaving the military for civil aviation, he was one of the first pilots to join
Western Canada Airways, operating in Manitoba and Northern Ontario. He flew the first aircraft on the prairie airmail circuit of Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, and Winnipeg. Soon, he and the bush pilots were also establishing a new frontier – the North. His wife, Connie, wrote a revealing account of their life in the north,
I Married a Bush Pilot. Punch Dickins became a legend in the Arctic; flying more than 1,000,000 miles across the uncharted North, often in treacherous weather conditions, with few landing strips, unreliable weather reporting and navigation aids nearly useless -as flying so close to the magnetic north pole made compass navigation unreliable. He invariably used dead reckoning and hand-drawn maps to plot his way across the north of Canada. Dickins was responsible for a number of landmark flights. He flew one of the first aerial surveys of Canada in 1928 in a
Fokker Super Universal (G-CASK). On 23 January 1929, Dickins delivered the first airmail to the
Northwest Territories. Despite this early success Western Canada lost the government airmail contract to Commercial Airways, which had its own famous bush pilot in
Wop May. He was also the first pilot to fly along the Arctic coastline, the first to fly over the Barren Lands in the Northwest Territories, and the first to fly the full 2,000 mile length of the
Mackenzie River, which he covered in two days. In 1930 he flew the first prospectors into
Great Bear Lake where they discovered
uranium, later required for the
Manhattan Project. In 1936 Punch conducted a 10,000 mile air survey of northern Canada. ==Second World War==