§A · Dispatch · Landing
Cisco Systems flies from Montana to Texas ranch in recurring private shuttle
The networking giant's Global 6000 continues a pattern of flights between a Montana airstrip and a Texas ranch, likely for executive personal travel.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Cisco Systems

Cisco Systems
Cisco Systems flew its Bombardier Global 6000, tail N600NB, from Gregory M. Simmons Memorial Airport in Montana to 16 Ranch Airport in Texas on June 4, 2026, a 2-hour 13-minute hop. The aircraft, registered to Cisco Aero – N9781 LLC per [regosearch.com](https://www.regosearch.com/aircraft/us/600NB), has made this same round trip at least five times in the past week, according to [Flightradar24](https://www.flightradar24.com/data/aircraft/n600nb) data.
No public event or business meeting in the remote Texas location is evident from the search results. The pattern suggests a regular commute between what appear to be two private properties—one in Montana, one in Texas. Cisco Systems does not disclose executive travel itineraries, but its proxy statement notes that executives may use corporate aircraft for personal use, reimbursing the company for incremental costs.
This shuttle is consistent with the company's disclosed policy and the aircraft's recent history. While Cisco's recurring destinations include major tech hubs like San Jose, Austin, and Washington, D.C., the repeated visits to rural airstrips in Montana and Texas point to personal travel—a quiet, lawful use of the fleet that the company has long made transparent.
Aboard the Bombardier Global 6000


The aircraft
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