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kfackler(at)ameritech.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 9:37 am Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Russ Kinne wrote:
Quote: | >FWIW I've landed on lots of off-airport sites, never had a problem,
>usually invited in for coffee, a meal, or even overnite.
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Not to diminish from the sorrow we're all feeling over Az Dave, but I think
Russ has broached a wonderful topic, to wit, things experienced after an
off-airport landing. I'd like to suggest that this threat NOT be about what
happened to the airplane, i.e., you damaged the landing gear or whatever,
but be about the EXPERIENCES you had, good or bad.
In that vein, I'll start with this one:
This was quite a few years ago, while flying from an ultralights-only field
in Red Oak, Tx. I was in the air and noticed that a bungee cord used to hold
one of the tail-bracing wires safely out of the prop arc had come undone.
Now, this was certainly no emergency but I felt more comfortable making a
precautionary landing and reattaching it. So I picked a likely looking field
that appeared to have been recently mowed or harvested and swooshed in.
After landing, I taxied to the end of the field from which I expected to
take off, turned into the wind and killed the engine. As I was climbing out,
I noticed a pickup truck nosing into the field. Now in my experience this
isn't an unusual occurence. It seems that an ultralight landing attracts
onlookers in vehicles quite as much as a bloody, multiple car pileup. So
anyway, I tossed the chap a casual wave and went about the business of
reattaching the offending bungee cord.
When I stood up and turned around I found myself looking down the barrel of
a gun. Not being an expert on such matters, I can't tell you what type of
gun it was, except that it was some kind of rifle and the bore looked like
big enough at that moment that I thought I could fly through it!
"Uh, what's wrong?" says I. Brilliant, just brilliant.
It turns out (surprised?) that he was the owner of the field and he was
righteously ticked off! Apparently some time in the not too distant past a
glider club had been making free with his field, landing there and then
driving vehicles and trailers all over his hay to retrieve them. He had told
them in no uncertain terms to clear out and not come back.
Since his home was just across the highway from this field, it was
unavoidable that he'd seen me land. And, not illogically, he assumed I was
part of the glider club. After some very tense moments, I managed to
convince him that I wasn't a member of that club and had only chosen his
field for a semi-emergency and that if he'd only not shoot me I'd be on my
way without any undue harm to his crop. After all, this was a real
ultralight (not a Kolb back then, alas) and it didn't weigh much, hardly
leaving even any wheel impressions on the stubble.
I eventually soothed his ruffled feathers, then soothed my own nerves enough
to get airborne and safely home. Who'd have thought you could come so close
to getting killed in an ultralight while it was on the ground?!
Next story?
-Ken Fackler
Kolb Mark II / A722KWF
Rochester MI
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R. Hankins
Joined: 18 Jan 2006 Posts: 185 Location: Grants Pass, Oregon
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 10:03 am Post subject: Re: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Last summer I landed in an alfalfa field about 7 miles southeast of Montegue, CA due to high bladder pressure. I took care of the pressure problem and was stretching my legs a little when I saw a vehicle approaching. A weathered older gentleman in a well used brown Ford F-250 pulled up next to me in a swirl of dust. I walked over, shook hands and explained the high pressure situation. He just chuckled and told me he thought I might need some help, so he drove out to see. We talked for a while, and by the time I left his son and a hired hand had shown up. That made three beat up pickup trucks in the field waiting to watch me take off.
I've never run into anyone in a bad mood while landing out. I'll keep my fingers crossed.
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_________________ Roger in Oregon
1992 KXP 503 - N1782C |
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Bill Vincent
Joined: 30 Jan 2006 Posts: 84
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 11:52 am Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Hi Gang
A few winters back while landing on a frozen lake in our local area to talk to some ice fishermen; which in the past has always been a fun experience because they are excited to see a plane land and are full of questions about flying in the winter; however this time a ice fisherman walked up to me and was very unhappy.
He stated it was very dangerous for me to be landing around other people, I informed him (nicely) that my plane only weighed 270 pounds and that I was only landing at 40 miles an hour, and that the snowmobile that just passed us was going 100 miles an hour and how much did the snowmobile weigh??
He looked at me, went into his ice shack and slammed the door shut,,,,never had another bad experience like this one again.
Bill Vincent
Firestar II
Upper Peninsula of Michigan
DO NOT ARCHIVE
[quote][b]
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_________________ Bill Vincent
Firestar II
Upper Peninsula of Michigan |
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a58r(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 12:53 pm Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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(way) Out landings...Not far from here there is a great 5000' hard
rnwy on private property...billionaire owner. Has RESTRICTED painted
lengthwise on rnwy. ABSOLUTELY NO ONE is to use it, except The Large
Cheese. Not too far away there are a couple of sailplane fields, and
some have force-landed there, much to their sorrow. However they do
come apart easily. Some years back, a student in a 150 , lost, abt
outa gas, flopped down. Met with armed guards. Plane was dismantled,
rather than just flown out.
regards,
Bob N. FireFly 070 Old Kolb
http://www.angelfire.com/rpg/ronoy/
do not archive
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blackbird
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 51
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 4:00 pm Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Good grief Bob,
Where is that runway at so we can all avoid it like the plague it is?
WT
---
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_________________ Wish I lived in the American REPUBLIC!!! |
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Ed in JXN
Joined: 24 Mar 2006 Posts: 122
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 4:09 pm Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Hi Bob,
Yeah, where izzit? Never know when one might get "carb ice".
Ed in JXN
MkII/503
Do not archive.
---
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a58r(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 5:35 pm Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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About halfway between KOKV Winchester VA and KIAD Dullass VA the
Mellon estate.
regards,
Bob N. FireFly 070 Old Kolb
http://www.angelfire.com/rpg/ronoy/
do not archive
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WillUribe(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 3:41 pm Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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John Williamson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 146 Location: Arlington, TX
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Posted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 7:43 pm Post subject: Re: Stories of off-airport landings |
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It's only illegal if you get caught!
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_________________ John Williamson
Arlington, TX
Kolbra, 912ULS, 1640 hours
http://home.tx.rr.com/kolbrapilot |
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John Hauck
Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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Posted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 9:59 pm Post subject: Re: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Dire need for pit stop. Nearest airport 30 miles north of course. Could not make it to the next airport on course. Decided to land in a dry creek bed in the desert on the California/Nevada border east of LA. Good landing, but dry creek bed was very deep sand. As a precaution, dug out in front of each main tire to help get the aircraft moving initially. Got out ok. Unique experience a long way from anywhere.
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_________________ John Hauck
MKIII/912ULS
hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama |
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flykolb(at)pa.net Guest
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Posted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 6:01 pm Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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In that vein, I'll continue with this one:
It was the first or second year TOK showed its TS at SNF. I took Howard
Levy, who used to write for Popular Mechanics but was then writing for
various aviation magazines, on a ride. We had an engine out, the TS had a
447 (yes the first TS was 447 powered) and that engine was never quite
right. That was the first of several seizures. It was during the flying
session and I landed in the woods - don't remember if was in or outside the
pattern, but it was close by. I landed on a narrow twisting dirt lane thru
the woods, gracefully following the twists and turns of the path until touch
down. Landed safely - no damage - and I was a bit apprehensive because I
was not ahmm, er ... properly credentialed to make such a flight with
passenger. So I was not anxious to hang around to see who might show up. I
pulled the starter cord and the 477 popped back to life as if nothing had
happened. I explained to Howard that I hated to leave him stranded, but I
thought I might get him out quicker if I went for help and, of course, I'd
be better off solo as I had to fly of the same twisty path I had landed on.
I got no argument from him! I got out of there fast and returned to paradise
city and went to get Howard in another vehicle for which I was properly
credentialed.
Howard was very gracious and never mentioned the incident in the article he
wrote on the TS. He could have ... but didn't.
Thanks Howard,
Dennis
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planecrazydld(at)yahoo.co Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 2:48 am Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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good morning Dennis;
Of all the posters on the list, I look forward to yours most due to your involvement in teh project throughout.
Please update the date on your PC though. It is a hassle to have to page back and back and back to find yoru postings since they are dated in 2002!
Thanks!
Dennis Souder <flykolb(at)pa.net> wrote:
[quote]--> Kolb-List message posted by: "Dennis Souder"
In that vein, I'll continue with this one:
It was the first or second year TOK showed its TS at SNF. I took Howard
Levy, who used to write for Popular Mechanics but was then writing for
various aviation magazines, on a ride. We had an engine out, the TS had a
447 (yes the first TS was 447 powered) and that engine was never quite
right. That was the first of several seizures. It was during the flying
session and I landed in the woods - don't remember if was in or outside the
pattern, but it was close by. I landed on a narrow twisting dirt lane thru
the woods, gracefully following the twists and turns of the path until touch
down. Landed safely - no damage - and I was a bit apprehensive because I
was not ahmm, er ... properly credentialed to make such a flight with
passenger. So I was not anxious to hang around to see who might show up. I
pulled the starter cord and the 477 popped back to life as if nothing had
happened. I explained to Howard that I hated to leave him stranded, but I
thought I might get him out quicker if I went for help and, of course, I'd
be better off solo as I had to fly of the same twisty path I had landed on.
I got no argument from him! I got out of there fast and returned to paradise
city and went to get Howard in another vehicle for which I was properly
credentialed.
Howard was Mortgage rates as low as 4.625% - $150,000 loan for $579 a month. Intro-*Terms [quote][b]
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Thom Riddle
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 6:12 am Post subject: Re: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Sometime in the summer of 1967, with my private ticket less than a year old and my courage and inexperience far out weighing common sense, I flew an old straight tailed C-150 from Lithonia, GA up to a place in North GA I'd heard other pilots talk about. The place called Turkey Mountain was allegedly a grass airport. After much searching I finally found it and landed. The roll out was extremely short as the "runway" was a bit overgrown, i.e., weeds just above knee-high. Obviously it was abandoned. This particular old airport was atop a mountain (Turkey, I presume) and was a one-way runway with a cemetary and mature forest at one end of the relatively short strip and the edge of the mountain at the other end. I taxied (with high power and the prop acting somewhat as a week-whacker) to the dead (cemetary) end and turned around. I had no idea whether I was going to get airborne or not but I had to try. No cell phones back then and NOTHING within sight down the mountain. Not sure how people used to get to the place because I didn't even see a dirt road up to it. At any rate, I gave the take-off my best efforts and when I got to the cliff edge end of the runway I was very close to flying speed with one notch of flaps and got airborne only after the runway passed behind me and I descended into the air below.
I am grateful to be able to tell that story. It could have ended badly and I never would have discovered the joys of Kolb flying or flying with safety being foremost in my mind.
do not archive
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_________________ Thom Riddle
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long.
- Anonymous |
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pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 7:30 am Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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runway passed behind me and I descended into the air below.>>
Hi Thom,
you are in good company. Sikorsky rescued Mussolini from a mountain top in
the same way. They loaded up a Fieseler Storch with Mussolini, Sikorsky,
pilot.. plus I think 4 others and just drove it over the edge. Takes guts
Cheers
Pat
do not archive
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Dennis.Kirby(at)kirtland. Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 7:48 am Post subject: Stories of Off-Airport Landings |
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Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Here's mine:
Before I knew about Kolbs, I owned a 1953 Piper TriPacer in partnership
with another fellow.
In 1994, I was flying it north of my home field, about 5 miles away,
when one magneto crapped out. With its short wing, you could not keep a
TriPacer in level flight with less than 70 percent power, so I ended up
landing in a freshly-mowed alfalfa field. Perfect landing, no damage.
Within minutes, a pickup truck rumbled up the dirt road and the owner
asked if I needed any help. I thanked him for his offer, and asked only
for a ride to his farmhouse, that I might use a phone to arrange for an
alternate ride home. The farmer was fine with leaving the plane parked
in his field for as long as I needed, and he gathered rope and stakes
for me to tie it down properly. (I learned from this incident that the
rural Mexican farmers around here are the friendliest, most gracious
salt-o-the earth folks you could meet.)
In this fenced-in alfalfa field were four horses. Now I've heard
stories of cows liking to chew on fabric airplanes, but horses (being
*this* much smarter than their bovine counterparts) do not. So I tied
down the TriPacer in the field, got a ride home, and planned to come out
the following weekend with some friends to remove the wings and tow it
the 5 miles back to the airport.
[Fast-forward one week.] Airplane is back at the airport, the wings
back on, and I'm giving it a preflight inspection. It was then I
noticed a huge dent in the bottom of one wing. One of the aluminum ribs
was crushed upward, as if hit hard from underneath. We finally
concluded that a curious horse was probably investigating this strange,
new thing in his field, and was under the wing when something must've
startled him. His enormous equine head, jerking up, is what apparently
hit the wing bottom, doing an amazing amount of damage. Lesson learned:
Keep your stranded airplanes away from large creatures!
Dennis Kirby
Rural New Mexico
do not archive
Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
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Thom Riddle
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1597 Location: Buffalo, NY, USA (9G0)
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 7:50 am Post subject: Re: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Pat,
Have you notices that "guts" tend to dissipate with age? I think it has an inverse mathematical coorelation with wisdom.
do not archive
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_________________ Thom Riddle
Buffalo, NY (9G0)
Don't worry about old age... it doesn't last very long.
- Anonymous |
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John Hauck
Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 4639 Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 8:37 am Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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Sikorsky rescued Mussolini from a mountain top in
| the same way. They loaded up a Fieseler Storch with Mussolini,
Sikorsky,
| pilot.. plus I think 4 others and just drove it over the edge. Takes
guts
|
| Pat
Patrick:
When you mentioned Sikorsky, it sparked my interest in your story
because of my past experience with helicopters. However, Sikorsky was
not involved, but a gentleman by the name of Skorzeny. Gerlach was
the pilot who rescued Mussolini. Skorzeny insisted on accompanying
Mussolini to get points with Hitler. Gerlach did not think the Storch
would fly with Mussolini, much less when Skorzeny piled on too.
For the rest of the story:
http://www.3squadron.org.au/sasso.htm
john h
mkIII
DO NOT ARCHIVE
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_________________ John Hauck
MKIII/912ULS
hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama |
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possums(at)bellsouth.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 9:12 am Post subject: Stories of Off-Airport Landings |
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Quote: | We finally
concluded that a curious horse was probably investigating this strange,
new thing in his field, and was under the wing when something must've
startled him. His enormous equine head, jerking up, is what apparently
hit the wing bottom, doing an amazing amount of damage. Lesson learned:
Keep your stranded airplanes away from large creatures!
Dennis Kirby
|
I've been there before - actually horses like to "rub" up against things
like fences and airplanes. I had to round up several and put them in the
barn (after the owner explained this habit of theirs to me) in
order to leave my plane in his field until the next day.
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jim
Joined: 03 Nov 2006 Posts: 107 Location: N. Idaho
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 10:09 am Post subject: Stories of Off-Airport Landings |
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The horse was probably scratching himself against your wing, resulting in
the dent.
Quote: |
<Dennis.Kirby(at)kirtland.af.mil>
Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Here's mine:
Before I knew about Kolbs, I owned a 1953 Piper TriPacer in partnership
with another fellow.
In 1994, I was flying it north of my home field, about 5 miles away,
when one magneto crapped out. With its short wing, you could not keep a
TriPacer in level flight with less than 70 percent power, so I ended up
landing in a freshly-mowed alfalfa field. Perfect landing, no damage.
Within minutes, a pickup truck rumbled up the dirt road and the owner
asked if I needed any help. I thanked him for his offer, and asked only
for a ride to his farmhouse, that I might use a phone to arrange for an
alternate ride home. The farmer was fine with leaving the plane parked
in his field for as long as I needed, and he gathered rope and stakes
for me to tie it down properly. (I learned from this incident that the
rural Mexican farmers around here are the friendliest, most gracious
salt-o-the earth folks you could meet.)
In this fenced-in alfalfa field were four horses. Now I've heard
stories of cows liking to chew on fabric airplanes, but horses (being
*this* much smarter than their bovine counterparts) do not. So I tied
down the TriPacer in the field, got a ride home, and planned to come out
the following weekend with some friends to remove the wings and tow it
the 5 miles back to the airport.
[Fast-forward one week.] Airplane is back at the airport, the wings
back on, and I'm giving it a preflight inspection. It was then I
noticed a huge dent in the bottom of one wing. One of the aluminum ribs
was crushed upward, as if hit hard from underneath. We finally
concluded that a curious horse was probably investigating this strange,
new thing in his field, and was under the wing when something must've
startled him. His enormous equine head, jerking up, is what apparently
hit the wing bottom, doing an amazing amount of damage. Lesson learned:
Keep your stranded airplanes away from large creatures!
Dennis Kirby
Rural New Mexico
do not archive
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_________________ Jim
N. Idaho |
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ulflyer(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 10:56 am Post subject: Stories of off-airport landings |
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A field I used to fly out of near Detroit there was a guy that
restored Fieseler Storch planes. Quite a bird if I must say. They
had a fund raiser for the airport and were selling rides in a Sterman
or a Storch. I took a ride in Sterman and have been crying over it
since. :'( I could have easily gotten a ride in a Sterman many times
over - but a Storch. dumb dumb dumb .... The other dumb thing was in
1974 when I hesitated on a chance to buy a fresh rebuilt flying PT-19
for $3500, and then some stranger from PA came in and offered the
widow $1500 and she sold it while the flight school had two other
checks in hand for $3K. I would have bought it for sure at that
price.
jerryb
At 09:30 AM 11/22/2006, you wrote:
Quote: |
runway passed behind me and I descended into the air below.>>
Hi Thom,
you are in good company. Sikorsky rescued Mussolini from a mountain
top in the same way. They loaded up a Fieseler Storch with
Mussolini, Sikorsky, pilot.. plus I think 4 others and just drove
it over the edge. Takes guts
Cheers
Pat
do not archive
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