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#1
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![]() Halloween fell on a Saturday this year. Well, if the soaring is a little soft, we can surely come up with alternate aviation entertainment. I invited three families with kids from our town who have adult airport ties, but parents who don't (yet) fly. Two families made it to the ramp for the afternoon. The local newspaper showed up with their camera. The airport cafe emptied onto the front porch to watch the game. The attendees were only required to bring along ammunition of a guage or caliber that allowed them to hold it under their arm against their waist, to be certain it was manageable by the various sizes of bombardiers. To keep the smaller ones entertained while everyone got their turn, fat markers were provided with directions to decorate melons, gourds, pumpkins with the names of siblings, coworkers or agencies that needed to be SPLATTED. A fun fellow, Wade Carman, who is adding his glider rating to a single-engine was an enthusiastic videographer. Karen Serkowski brought along a huge plate of major decorated cupcakes, Caracole had spiced apple cider, and thankfully a pair of airplanes for bombing platforms. The weather was sparkling and calm. Six of the seven kids had never been off the ground before in anything smaller than a fat Boeing. One from each household was reluctant to think about a flight. Instructions were offered that a parent, sibling or other designated pilot could be chosen to loft or heave the quiet ones 'bomb'. But by the time their chance came around, ALL the kids went up and gave a great heave-ho. Adults who had not flown, or had a long layoff from flight all got a chance also. Passes were at ~300 agl and mostly 60-65 knots. Chuck Klein, Derek Lisoski and Marty Eiler were the designated drivers, and coached most rear seaters into the approximate release timing. The upended bright red 55-gallon trash can was sufficiently north of the ramp area to assure compliance with FAR 91.15. Only one glider bombing launch was made, with plenty of ammo on board, and several governmental agencies were smashed! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_h-c8pbJu2s Following bombing, sugary treats were washed down with cider, and the investigation of accuracy began. It was determined that the red-trash can is safe to serve for another event. (Zero hits, except by peripheral spray.) Already, three folks, large and small, have asked if we can heave turkeys in a few weeks! And I have it on authority from the parents that the stories of derring-do and accomplishment are spreading through the elementary and junior high schools, along with hopes to repeat their flights. What a way to promote youthful interest in the airfield and pilots! In December we have the return visit of Boy Scouts for their fall intro flight day. If you aren't busy elsewhere, give us a call and come join the fun. Cindy B www.caracolesoaring.com |
#2
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Wonderful Cindy,
You realize Pumpkin Pies are traditional at T'day too! I like this version of Pumpkin Chunking better than the NJ style. Keep it coming and we'll have the whole town flying gliders by Easter! Maybe you could go on the road as a Flying Circus of Pumpkin Bombing? Wayne |
#3
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On Nov 16, 11:28*am, Free Flight 107 wrote:
Wonderful Cindy, You realize Pumpkin Pies are traditional at T'day too! I like this version of Pumpkin Chunking better than the NJ style. Keep it coming and we'll have the whole town flying gliders by Easter! Maybe you could go on the road as a Flying Circus of Pumpkin Bombing? Wayne I finally had an opportunity to watch the video last night. What a Hoot!! That's a super way to get kids some 'initial exposure' to flying! Back seat in the convertable Grob looks like fun too. |
#4
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So who won?
"CindyB" wrote in message ... Halloween fell on a Saturday this year. Well, if the soaring is a little soft, we can surely come up with alternate aviation entertainment. I invited three families with kids from our town who have adult airport ties, but parents who don't (yet) fly. Two families made it to the ramp for the afternoon. The local newspaper showed up with their camera. The airport cafe emptied onto the front porch to watch the game. The attendees were only required to bring along ammunition of a guage or caliber that allowed them to hold it under their arm against their waist, to be certain it was manageable by the various sizes of bombardiers. To keep the smaller ones entertained while everyone got their turn, fat markers were provided with directions to decorate melons, gourds, pumpkins with the names of siblings, coworkers or agencies that needed to be SPLATTED. A fun fellow, Wade Carman, who is adding his glider rating to a single-engine was an enthusiastic videographer. Karen Serkowski brought along a huge plate of major decorated cupcakes, Caracole had spiced apple cider, and thankfully a pair of airplanes for bombing platforms. The weather was sparkling and calm. Six of the seven kids had never been off the ground before in anything smaller than a fat Boeing. One from each household was reluctant to think about a flight. Instructions were offered that a parent, sibling or other designated pilot could be chosen to loft or heave the quiet ones 'bomb'. But by the time their chance came around, ALL the kids went up and gave a great heave-ho. Adults who had not flown, or had a long layoff from flight all got a chance also. Passes were at ~300 agl and mostly 60-65 knots. Chuck Klein, Derek Lisoski and Marty Eiler were the designated drivers, and coached most rear seaters into the approximate release timing. The upended bright red 55-gallon trash can was sufficiently north of the ramp area to assure compliance with FAR 91.15. Only one glider bombing launch was made, with plenty of ammo on board, and several governmental agencies were smashed! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_h-c8pbJu2s Following bombing, sugary treats were washed down with cider, and the investigation of accuracy began. It was determined that the red-trash can is safe to serve for another event. (Zero hits, except by peripheral spray.) Already, three folks, large and small, have asked if we can heave turkeys in a few weeks! And I have it on authority from the parents that the stories of derring-do and accomplishment are spreading through the elementary and junior high schools, along with hopes to repeat their flights. What a way to promote youthful interest in the airfield and pilots! In December we have the return visit of Boy Scouts for their fall intro flight day. If you aren't busy elsewhere, give us a call and come join the fun. Cindy B www.caracolesoaring.com |
#5
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Who won?
Everyone who flew that day, and everyone who watched the video, and everyone who uses the idea for a fun game to get more folks to their airfield for next year. Really? The Red trash can target won. It remained unmolested for another year. It had a few splattered pieces from rebounding effect, but was otherwise untouched. Call me a nervous nellie, but I wouldn't let anyone near the impact zone for 'scoring' while the aircraft were still in action. Considering we flew about 20 folks that afternoon, beginning at 2 pm, scoring accurately would have slowed things down toooo much. Some smashing folks had to get home to collect or distribute candy to little folks. We checked the trash can at about four thiry ... before sundown. Cindy B www.caracolesoaring.com On Nov 22, 6:12*pm, "Dan Thirkill" wrote: So who won? "CindyB" wrote in message ... Halloween fell on a Saturday this year. |
#6
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On Nov 24, 3:07*am, CindyB wrote:
Who won? Everyone who flew that day, and everyone who watched the video, and everyone who uses the idea for a fun game to get more folks to their airfield for next year. Really? The Red trash can target won. It remained unmolested for another year. It had a few splattered pieces from rebounding effect, but was otherwise untouched. Call me a nervous nellie, but I wouldn't let anyone near the impact zone for 'scoring' * while the aircraft were still in action. *Considering we flew about 20 folks that afternoon, beginning at 2 pm, scoring accurately would have slowed things down toooo much. Some smashing folks had to get home to collect or distribute candy to little folks. *We checked the trash can at about four thiry ... before sundown. Cindy Bwww.caracolesoaring.com On Nov 22, 6:12*pm, "Dan Thirkill" wrote: So who won? "CindyB" wrote in message .... Halloween fell on a Saturday this year. I heard a Ralph Kiner story about two baseball players in the early days of the last century when they saw a barnstorming airplane for the first time. The catcher said, "I bet I could catch a baseball thrown from that plane" and the pitcher said "You're on!" They went over to where the plane landed and made the arrangements. The pitcher actually threw an orange from the plane (unknown to the catcher). The force of the impact knocked the catcher flat on his back. The orange juice got in his eyes and temporarily blinded him, so he could only tell the effects by feel. He though the juice was his blood and the seeds were his teeth. |
#7
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On Nov 24, 9:03*am, mattm wrote:
On Nov 24, 3:07*am, CindyB wrote: Who won? Everyone who flew that day, and everyone who watched the video, and everyone who uses the idea for a fun game to get more folks to their airfield for next year. Really? The Red trash can target won. It remained unmolested for another year. It had a few splattered pieces from rebounding effect, but was otherwise untouched. Call me a nervous nellie, but I wouldn't let anyone near the impact zone for 'scoring' * while the aircraft were still in action. *Considering we flew about 20 folks that afternoon, beginning at 2 pm, scoring accurately would have slowed things down toooo much. Some smashing folks had to get home to collect or distribute candy to little folks. *We checked the trash can at about four thiry ... before sundown. Cindy Bwww.caracolesoaring.com On Nov 22, 6:12*pm, "Dan Thirkill" wrote: So who won? "CindyB" wrote in message .... Halloween fell on a Saturday this year. I heard a Ralph Kiner story about two baseball players in the early days of the last century when they saw a barnstorming airplane for the first time. The catcher said, "I bet I could catch a baseball thrown from that plane" and the pitcher said "You're on!" They went over to where the plane landed and made the arrangements. The pitcher actually threw an orange from the plane (unknown to the catcher). The force of the impact knocked the catcher flat on his back. *The orange juice got in his eyes and temporarily blinded him, so he could only tell the effects by feel. *He though the juice was his blood and the seeds were his teeth.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Messy! (and arguably mean) The catcher would have won the bet with a baseball, as terminal velocity (roughly 40m/sec, or 90ish mph) is slower than a fast ball thrown by amajor league pitcher! |
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