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This poem was sent to me by my all grown-up aspiring to be a writer
daughter. Hope you enjoy it....I did. I jam the doorway of my father's 1500 sq. ft. shop he built. It's bigger than my apartment in the city. It has it's own air conditioner. He spends hours in there, curved over his workbench, fiddling with parts and pieces, working power tools like toys. My eyes tumble over his crusty knuckles, his coriaceous hands, his "I still got five fingers" hands, his "do-it-yourself" hands, his "I grew-up-on-a-ranch hands. Hands that make quick work of sheet metal the way a baker knowingly shapes dough into pretzels. methodically tracing, bending, melding scraggy bits into something tasteful. He steps to the blueprint with a magnifier, following the line with one tan finger while turning the piece of metal he made with the other, comparing. "Aren't you afraid of making a mistake?" I ask. His deep, earthy eyes rise from concentration and fall on me, daughter spying from the doorway. He sighs at the question, shakes his head, gets that half-grin twisted up in his mouth until a smile breaks loose. "I guess we'll find out if I do!" he jokes. Joke that isn't funny. It won't be the first time I've had to watch my father hop in a cockpit of a plane he pieced together with epoxy and liquid metal and taxi the runway and take off and transform into a tiny bird while we hold our breath wondering whether or not he will ever come down from that cloudy perch, whether or not we will be fledglings left in the next with mouths wide open, whether or not we will have to hear, or rather - not hear, the sound of the prop faltering or the engine sputtering or the bird exploding in the sky like a puff of God's cigar smoke. He interrupts: "I could hire a test pilot for the first flight, but if I made even one mistake..." trailing off his eyes go far away, contemplating the outcome of one missed bolt, one loose connection. "well...I just wouldn't be able to live with myself." I am at once terrified and humbled by this daredevil Dad, this person who built a 1500 sq. ft. shop so he could construct this plane, so he could hang in the sky dangleing in front of his maker, so he could dangle in front of us all and make us wonder if we'll ever see him again. |
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Dave Hyde wrote in message ...
dave wrote: This poem was sent to me by my all grown-up aspiring to be a writer daughter. Hope you enjoy it....I did. Eeeeks, that hits kinda close to home. Here's to conservative planning and buildup. Dave 'saving an out' Hyde As a post-script, my daughter (Heather), said this was more of a compilation of all my aviations projects. Chronologically, my homebuilding endeavors were as follow: 1st..An elliptical wing Craig Catto designed CA-15 of fiberglass and mylar. First flight was o.k., other than a landing gear failure. Heather was too young to remember that one. 2nd..A single place fiberglass and alluminum airplane of my own design. Very scarey first flight...Heather vaguely remmebers that one. 3rd...A Kolb Ultra-star. Great plane, east to build and fly, already a tested design, no problems..she remembers that one very well. 4th... An RV-6A built in my walk-out basement. Source of my "test flight" comments. No problems at all, but I had her by the runway and next to a fire-extinguisher. (probably not a good idea) 5th...and current project, (which I built the shop for), another RV6 This one I aquired as a project and am probably halfway through. She said the poem wasn't so much one of fear for my safety, but more of admiration and maybe a little bit of "why the heck is he doing this?" Hopefully, I've got wiser and more careful in my old age, but we all know why we build airplanes! |
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Aerobatics and children | [email protected] | Aerobatics | 7 | December 26th 04 09:27 AM |