We are chock-full of veterans tonight, of course (we gave the rooms away to any U.S. veteran or active duty military), and the cable TV on the island has gone down.
This has been the best possible thing that could have happened, as -- one by one -- our veteran guests have come to the lobby to borrow a DVD movie or two. (All of our rooms have DVD players, and we have over 200 aviation movies available for free checkout.)
While they are here, I have been able to chat with them about their service. We have every war represented tonight, from WWII, Korea, Viet Nam, Grenada, Gulf I and Gulf II, but (so far) the most fascinating guy has been an old WWII vet who reported to Hap Arnold.
He flew in B-17s (ball turret), B-24s (navigator/bombardier), and B-32s. I had never met anyone who flew in the Dominator -- a short-lived super-heavy bomber that was the size of a B-29. The war ended, and so did the Dominator, so few guys got to fly it, and no example of the aircraft survives.
When he and his crew picked up the plane, it was still designated the "X-32". That's how new it was! It was Hap Arnold's personal project, and only the best got to fly in it.
This gentleman (a guy with two doctorates, who is working on another one -- at age 87!) had lots of stories about the war. The first 18 days he was at gunnery school, the flags were at half-mast, due to daily casualties. (One in particular was a P-51 that crashed into a B-24 as they practiced gunnery, killing all aboard both planes.) Another was the time he tried to pull the B-17 up with his butt muscles, as he was in the ball turret when the pilot flew so low that they actually scraped the top of the mesquite trees. (He said the heat shrouds on his twin fifties were full of mesquite branches after they landed.
Fun times tonight at the inn!