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#1
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hopefully we will see you (and Mary and the newly plane-less Christine)
dancing on Atlas' wing yet again... Ah, yes...can life get any better than OSH? Newly plane-less? Yes, sadly, Brian & Christine have sold our Baby to some strangers in Monticello, IA. Hopefully they'll treat her well. But B&C are hoping to build an RV-10, so they should only be plane-less for, oh, five years or so... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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Jay Honeck wrote:
hopefully we will see you (and Mary and the newly plane-less Christine) dancing on Atlas' wing yet again... Ah, yes...can life get any better than OSH? Newly plane-less? Yes, sadly, Brian & Christine have sold our Baby to some strangers in Monticello, IA. Hopefully they'll treat her well. But B&C are hoping to build an RV-10, so they should only be plane-less for, oh, five years or so... Poor folks, I think building would be fun, but only if I had a working plane and time to build and fly. I guess retirement can't come soon enough! I tell you having the Navion down for 3 years almost killed me. Margy |
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("Margy" wrote)
Poor folks, I think building would be fun, but only if I had a working plane and time to build and fly. I guess retirement can't come soon enough! I tell you having the Navion down for 3 years almost killed me. Look where you ended up working ...a little something to help ease the pain :-) Montblack |
#4
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Margy I know the feeling! Heck I retired have all kinds of time and very
little money to build and rebuild projects! The old Catch 22!!!!! The Volksplane VP1 is coming together pretty slow in the basement, and I dream of a decent Luscombe project!!!! And building a Thatcher CX4, and a Sonex...ahhhhhh to work and be rich again ![]() Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech ("Margy" wrote) Poor folks, I think building would be fun, but only if I had a working plane and time to build and fly. I guess retirement can't come soon enough! I tell you having the Navion down for 3 years almost killed me. |
#5
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Montblack wrote:
("Margy" wrote) Poor folks, I think building would be fun, but only if I had a working plane and time to build and fly. I guess retirement can't come soon enough! I tell you having the Navion down for 3 years almost killed me. Look where you ended up working ...a little something to help ease the pain :-) Montblack Hee, Hee, Hee. Yes, I'm having fun, but I have a hoard of docents who keep asking "When is the plane going to be finished?" Margy |
#6
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Poor folks, I think building would be fun, but only if I had a working
plane and time to build and fly. I guess retirement can't come soon enough! I tell you having the Navion down for 3 years almost killed me. I don't know how you did it. I trust you kept current in rental planes? We've got friends who just finished their Glasair III last month. It's the single most beautifully crafted airplane I've ever seen -- but it took him TEN YEARS to build! During that decade his wife discovered she had breast cancer, and was thankfully able to beat it. But during that decade he spent every, single night building, first in his home, then in his hangar. Night after night after night... What if that had been *him* that got cancer? He would have spent 3000 nights in an unheated hangar, by himself, and for what? Life is just too short to use that kind of time. Flying is life. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#7
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In article vhGie.3725$796.3332@attbi_s21, Jay Honeck wrote:
What if that had been *him* that got cancer? He would have spent 3000 nights in an unheated hangar, by himself, and for what? For some people, building isn't "work", it's a major part (maybe entirely) of the fun of the project. Those 3000 nights of building may be the thing that kept him going. There are quite a few home builders who spend 2000 hours building a plane, fly it for maybe a year or two, then sell it and buy a new kit to build because they enjoy building more than they do flying. Life is just too short to use that kind of time. For you - maybe, but for someone who loves the building aspect, life is too short for *flying* because it means they spend less time *building*. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#8
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For you - maybe, but for someone who loves the building aspect, life is
too short for *flying* because it means they spend less time *building*. That's just...wrong. ;-) I'm a wood-worker, and enjoy creating and repairing things -- but flying is so vastly superior to any other human endeavor, it's hard for me to imagine giving up one moment of it in favor of sanding fiberglass or bucking rivets... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#9
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news
![]() I'm a wood-worker, and enjoy creating and repairing things -- but flying is so vastly superior to any other human endeavor, it's hard for me to imagine giving up one moment of it in favor of sanding fiberglass or bucking rivets... It seems to me that more people build aircraft up north than they do down south... There's probably a couple of reasons for it... Perhaps having winters that don't give you that many flying days might be a factor along with having basements to do a good part of the building process in might also be another factor... |
#10
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It seems to me that more people build aircraft up north than they do down
south... There's probably a couple of reasons for it... Perhaps having winters that don't give you that many flying days might be a factor along with having basements to do a good part of the building process in might also be another factor... Good theories. There have been quite a number of books written about why the world's dominant, most productive and innovative civilizations (at least in the last several hundred years) have all been in colder climates. I always figured it's because they had to stay busy to keep warm. ("Jeez, Fritz, it's really *cold* out today." "Brrrr....sure is, Hans...hey, let's go conquer France!") So, 500 years ago, these guys would've been out pillaging nearby villages. Today, they're building RV-10s...? ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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