Dean
Pattern Altitude
The other night we had 9 tornadoes go from SW Missouri up through the St.Louis area. A F1 went just south of runway 22 at VIH where some old DC3s have been parked for years. He are a few pictures a buddy of mine emailed me.
I'd like to see the wingless one go to the museum in Lubbock, it was a glider tug during WWII. Still has brackets for the tow rope in the tail.
Tony,
I went there in March and spent 3 days with the curator. I donated some of my grandfathers items. He was the GP who knocked out a tank with a bazooka in the Varsity Mission.
They said the C-47 currently there is on loan from a Marine museum, and they won't even let them put a decal or glider logo on it. But they expect them to maintain it to an insane level. I'd like to see them get their own. I hope to start helping them restore some of the training gliders they have stored in a hangar soon.
Chris
I didn't get to go look, no one could find the keys to the hangar! LOL One of the volunteers said they had 3 or 4 in unrestored condition. Another Leister-Coffman (sp?) like the one hanging in the museum. A Taylorcraft TG-6, an Aeronca TG-5 and I don't remember the other. They also have a lot of stuff not on display, they are still trying to sort it all out. I told them I don't have room to store one, but if I could get pieces I'd be happy to retore/recover what I could and send it back, then they could send more. I just don't have the room right now to have one laying around. Wish I was closer so I could do more.
The training gliders are part of the Silent Wings Museum in Lubbock, TX. The DC3's are at Vichy. One tangent led to another, sorry for the confusion.
And the ferry pilot thing really p#$!?d me off! I hate to see an airplane abused because you "think" you're good enough especially one I hold quite dear. There's no shame in recurrent training or finding someone competent.
Believe me, if you meet no other person, you need to meet Jon Weiss once in your life. He's something else. Not only does he still love to fly, he still loves working on them. Last summer he had some health problems and we were all wondering if this was it, and if he'd finish and fly the Fairchild before he died. Not only did he finish and fly it, he got bored. He bought a J-3 that needed some work just to have something else to do!!
He still has the twinkle of a child in his eyes when he's around airplanes. When I was in high school and being an airport bum, he pointed at me and told me, "Don't do ANYTHING you don't love doing, I never have." I think about that a lot and that's one reason why I'm on my own now and not working for ungratefull A-holes. He's one in a million.
I remember landing at Cuba years ago and giving FSS a PIREP from the old phone booth at the airport...told them I could hear thunder from the phone booth. The storms chased us up to Sullivan that day.I live in Cuba, but my hangar is at Rolla National (VIH or KVIH depending on your GPS).
chris - a spring bbq sounds like a great idea. Ill have some students looking for XC destinations by then.
based on the way your former glider students (me!) fly glider XC's they'll be lucky to make it past Des Moines!
I laughed out loud when I read that! I'll race you, Tony. Just turn the McCready down a notch from Matt's normal setting, and you'll stay in the air instead of the normal outcome.