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#1
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I was telling some of the recent stories to a friend who is not
computer literate. He had one of his own. In the early sixties, he and his cousin worked for the newspaper in Amarillo. They had worked all Saturday night. There was a family reunion Sunday at his Grandpa's farm north of Amarillo. When they got off Sunday morning, they climbed into his old Stinson and headed for the farm. Of course, they took a Sunday paper for Grandpa. As they approached the farm, they could see it had rained the night before. He normally landed on the road between two fields that ran from the county road up to the house. He was afraid it might be muddy so he buzzed the house a time or two. That brought everyone out into the yard. There was a lot of waving but he didn't know if they were waving him off or waving him down. They decide they will write a note on the newspaper and drop it between the house and barn. A note: Can we land on the lane? was attached to the paper with many rubber bands. He pulled her up almost to a stall and tucked over into a steep dive for the bomb run. Cuz punched the paper out. He pulled out and banked around just in time to see the explosion. Newspaper and cedar shingles filled the air around a gaping hole in Grandpa's front porch roof. That day is now referred to as the roofing reunion. |
#2
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Great Story Andy,
As a freshman in High School I was told about older school mates that were running for their lives as the "air scouts" had the bright idea of "dropping" hard candy out the window of their C150 during the football rally. :-( Can anybody figure out what the terminal velocity from a thousand feet of a jawbreaker or bubble gum is for me? It's got to be over a hundred! The FAA decided it was enough for a violation/suspension of the offending air scouts. This gave someone the sinister idea my senior year of dropping paper leaflets during the noon time rally for the big game that night against the rival high school. But as is the case with all bank robberies or arial attacks for that matter, nothing ever goes entirely according to plan. The injured pair of former players decided that to really upstage the foolish former attack they had to get the gov to pay for a lot of this mischief. Terry Roenfelt's mom worked at the county, so he spent all night printing and cutting up a black trash bag full of 3x5's that the pair had designed earlier in the week in drafting class. These leaflets had slogans on them like "hang the Hillmen" (the rival team) Seniors rule, Sophmores suck, and named certain male organ resemblances to the school principle's er… head. Terry's pilot, third string receiver and defensive end with a wet PPL, rolled up to his house in the morning in his el Camino fully expecting his accomplice to puss out. But there was 5ft 1 in, 225 lb Terry in the morning fog, gripping a trash bag nearly as big around as he was. "We going to go through with this?" :^D Neither fiend could possibly back out now. It was now strictly a matter of peer pressure! The dastardly duo, decked out in their torn green jerseys and Jap Kamikaze headbands hot rod-ed their way to the scene of the crime. An unmarked STOL strip on a ridge. The vehicle barely made it up the mountain that day since it was still muddy. They loaded up and discovered that the nose tire was nearly flat. Damn. Gotta stop by a paved airport and get some air before the damn thing goes all the way flat. But this would produce unwanted witnesses and put the crime at least five minutes behind rally dismissal! At least the fog burned off. Gotta cut some corners. Instead of a normal departure over the river the PPL decides to make a 45 degree bank after t/o down a ravine to save time. Uh, Oh! Nose pitches down and duo misses the brush on the recovery by not much at all! (Upon later reflection, would realize this was his first unplanned accel. stall!) But Terry thought it was all part of the gag! No need to tell him. Get tire air in front of witnesses and then it's full throttle the five miles up to the school which revealed that few people remained for the bombing. Damn. The duo set up anyway, opened the C150 window, took it to redline and the call was made to start dumping prior to the school (gotta allow for papers sucking behind the aircraft, right? Hmm, not sure. And is there a crosswind? forgot to check. But Terry gets fouled up with the bag and by the time he gets done shaking it we're…. ahem, I mean… by the time he gets done shaking it *they're* 20 ft over the rooftops. The duo pulls up and looks back. It's an amazing cloud of little white particles suspended in space, each flickering in the sunlight. It also appears to be a direct hit. But the wind is drifting it off (illusion from our angle.) ****. What a couple of dumb****s! Buzzed the school and missed! To make matters worse, Terry discovers that about a quarter of the bag didn't get dumped. So he shakes it over some poor farmers house before I can object. No matter, now it's time to land, and get back into class ASAP. The dejected duo, arrives at high speed about like the dukes of hazard, to confirm the bad news: not a single goddang paper on the ground! "Never mind the shame for missing Terry" the sage 18 yr old pilot says, "we'll just deny the mission ever happened, yeah, that's the ticket!" Just then the bell rings and the dumb-**** duo stares blankly at their would-have-been worshippers filing out of the classrooms. Then they guawk at each other with amazement as they both realize that nearly every student has a 3x5 pinned to their shirt or tapped to their bookbags. Fame, Fortune, Admiration and pussy surely await the dashing duo now! Oh yeah, the cops were dispatched to at least two airports, the drafting teacher recognized the leaflets as our handy work in his class the day before, and it was discovered we were absent from the first two classes. But nobody blew our cover at the tire-fill up airport. I've liked civilian pilots ever since. We weren't heroes though because outside a small circle of pals and faculty, no-one believed we did it (except the drafting teacher who screamed in class: "you could have killed 2000 people!" Told him I'd discuss it after class. Bell rang, I split!) And lucky for me, the call from the FAA to help me never came! pacplyer (hope you've enjoyed my fictional story!) Andy Asberry wrote in message . .. I was telling some of the recent stories to a friend who is not computer literate. He had one of his own. In the early sixties, he and his cousin worked for the newspaper in Amarillo. They had worked all Saturday night. There was a family reunion Sunday at his Grandpa's farm north of Amarillo. When they got off Sunday morning, they climbed into his old Stinson and headed for the farm. Of course, they took a Sunday paper for Grandpa. As they approached the farm, they could see it had rained the night before. He normally landed on the road between two fields that ran from the county road up to the house. He was afraid it might be muddy so he buzzed the house a time or two. That brought everyone out into the yard. There was a lot of waving but he didn't know if they were waving him off or waving him down. They decide they will write a note on the newspaper and drop it between the house and barn. A note: Can we land on the lane? was attached to the paper with many rubber bands. He pulled her up almost to a stall and tucked over into a steep dive for the bomb run. Cuz punched the paper out. He pulled out and banked around just in time to see the explosion. Newspaper and cedar shingles filled the air around a gaping hole in Grandpa's front porch roof. That day is now referred to as the roofing reunion. |
#3
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![]() pacplyer (hope you've enjoyed my fictional story!) Yeah, right. Fiction. Here's another fiction story mate! The time was winter of 1984 and this goofy CFI was in absolute love with a photographer who worked for the company where he worked. The lover boy had access to a Cessna turbo 210 which his boss happily paid him to fly during the weekdays. But upon occasion, the 210 needed flying for a test hop after maintenance on the weekend or other strange and "off" times. Lover boy knew that the focus of his testosterone was sking on a local mountain top ski resort in southern Utah on Saturday morning. With buddy in tow (right seat) they took 1500 leaflets (made on a company copy machine) saying, "I love you Dee Dee" to said ski slope resort. The canyon where the ski runs terminated was at 9000 msl. Many hundreds of people were there in lift-lines as the (wantabe) wild weasle cessna made it's pass from out of the sun. Indicating some 200 knots at the bottom of a long dive toward the lift lines, the cessna pilot pulled up the nose to about 45 degrees and rolled the airplane inverted. At this very instant his buddy in tow released the garbage bag full of the "Love leaflets" over the crowd. A half roll back to upright and a 3-g pull up followed by a 120 degree left 90 degree banking turn yielded a good look at the damage. The sky was filled with the small paper leaflets as they rained down upon the unwary. The Cessna made it's getaway to land some 165 miles away in Las Vegas. Who would know that an airplane from 165 miles away would do such a thing off in even another state? Nobody but Dee Dee. Yep. No calls from the FAA, no police knocking on the door, just a smile from Dee Dee on Monday morning at the office about how cool it was to see a Cessna 210 making a 200 knot inverted pass over the ski resort and dropping love notes to her. Yes, I did get laid. BWB |
#4
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![]() Yes, I did get laid. BWB WWW (Wild Weasle-Wanabe) Fictional Story #69: In the world of clandestine GA buzzing, this is what we refer to as a confirmed kill Bill. Kudos on the bull's eye BWB. Glad you picked a turbo for the high alt mission. I was actually still 17 yrs old on that last unsuccessful mission to get laid now that I think about it. My next target unfortunately was the old Russian tea-house on the island inside the crater-ring of mountains of Emerald Bay Lake Tahoe. I picked up some great looking pussy who knew of my aerial prowess (thank god, cuz she also knew of my dismal football stats,) and proceeded to show her the true awesome power of a C150 with full tanks and two people. I mean her tits were so big, I wasn't sure we could make over mountains! We labored up highway 50. Being an experienced 18-yr-old pilot with over one hundred hours of flight time, I knew exactly what I was doing. I knew to fly IFR (I follow roads) just in case the rubber band broke. Lucky for me the 6500 ft mountain air was still when we arrived up at Lake Tahoe because after the damn timing retarding AD came out on the 0-200, this particular frickin engine with the cruise prop installed was bogging me down to 80mph at full throttle leaned (and using periodic carb ht, to keep it going!) But this was a "wild weasel" wana-be mission from God, so I flew into the bay 100 ft off the water unafraid (18-yr-old's are immortal, and thus, have no fear of anything.) Better make a couple of orbits first to look for Ranger Rick or any tree huggers that might be hangin around before the buzz job. My oh my! It takes 50 degrees in this thing just to keep from hitting the walls in this crater! Not good, Not good, this slug losses altitude at 55 degress! (second mild unplanned accel stall!) Engine running rough now…. gotta have some carb heat.. ****! 15 ft off the water now. Dumb bitch is babbling to me about how pretty it is etc! Can't use carb heat again.. too low, too slow! Looks like were going swimming! At least she'll float. But here comes the opening of the bay again. Roll out! Carb Ht! RPm! Back Off!… Whew! made it. "Wow that was bitchin!" the blonde bombshell says. " Let's do it again. How come you're sweating so much? Pac? How come you're shaking?" "uh….mummble mummble..." I say, "think I'm coming down a fever or something…. let's go home." Although the buzz job on the Russian tea house was by technical military standards an abort: 1. did not drown. 2. finally got credited later for a bull's eye, a confirmed kill with the wild weasel. pacplyer - out |
#5
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"pacplyer" wrote in message WWW (Wild Weasle-Wanabe) Fictional Story
#69: I just came back from a trip. I was flying with another fellow who's background is similar to mine. We both grew up in South Florida and learned to fly during the 'Miami Vice' years. He recounted a tale from his days of working line. He was pumping gas one day when a grundgy Twin Beech came in from the islands and was swarmed by DEA agents soon after landing. This was a fairly regular thing in those days. The difference about this tale is that the pilot didn't get busted. The agents eventually left the Twin Beech and came to my friend's ramp to fuel their own plane. He asked the agents about the details. It seems that the pilot worked for an insurance company and stole the plane back from some dopers who stole it first. The agents had been staking out the island and the plane for some time. They saw the plane start the take-off roll and then they saw the dopers start firing their guns at the plane. They figured about 300 rounds were fired. The agents cornered the Beech after it landed to find out what was going on. They wanted to know what the heck had just happened. They wanted to know how the pilot got past their surveillance. They wanted to know how the pilot got past the dopers. As I listened to my fellow pilot's tale, I started to remember those days from a long time ago. I keep those memories to myself though. Most folks hear those stories and associate the pilot with being a reckless cowboy. I have to maintain a reputation as a professional pilot, so I just keep quiet. Maybe some day after I reach the official old pilot age of 60, when I don't need my professional reputation any more, I'll write a book. D. |
#6
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"Capt.Doug" wrote:
"pacplyer" wrote in message WWW (Wild Weasle-Wanabe) Fictional Story #69: I just came back from a trip. I was flying with another fellow who's background is similar to mine. We both grew up in South Florida and learned to fly during the 'Miami Vice' years. He recounted a tale from his days of working line. He was pumping gas one day when a grundgy Twin Beech came in from the islands and was swarmed by DEA agents soon after landing. This was a fairly regular thing in those days. The difference about this tale is that the pilot didn't get busted. The agents eventually left the Twin Beech and came to my friend's ramp to fuel their own plane. He asked the agents about the details. It seems that the pilot worked for an insurance company and stole the plane back from some dopers who stole it first. The agents had been staking out the island and the plane for some time. They saw the plane start the take-off roll and then they saw the dopers start firing their guns at the plane. They figured about 300 rounds were fired. The agents cornered the Beech after it landed to find out what was going on. They wanted to know what the heck had just happened. They wanted to know how the pilot got past their surveillance. They wanted to know how the pilot got past the dopers. As I listened to my fellow pilot's tale, I started to remember those days from a long time ago. I keep those memories to myself though. Most folks hear those stories and associate the pilot with being a reckless cowboy. I have to maintain a reputation as a professional pilot, so I just keep quiet. Maybe some day after I reach the official old pilot age of 60, when I don't need my professional reputation any more, I'll write a book. D. If you have more stories like that, please do! I've heard repo guys think they're pretty tough. But this guy... Richard |
#7
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"Capt.Doug" wrote in message ...
"pacplyer" wrote in message WWW (Wild Weasle-Wanabe) Fictional Story #69: I just came back from a trip. I was flying with another fellow who's background is similar to mine. We both grew up in South Florida and learned to fly during the 'Miami Vice' years. He recounted a tale from his days of working line. He was pumping gas one day when a grundgy Twin Beech came in from the islands and was swarmed by DEA agents soon after landing. This was a fairly regular thing in those days. The difference about this tale is that the pilot didn't get busted. "Good, give yourself to the dark cargo side Doug, Hisss hisssss! If you only knew the power of the dark side of aviation writing!" The agents eventually left the Twin Beech and came to my friend's ramp to fuel their own plane. He asked the agents about the details. It seems that the pilot worked for an insurance company and stole the plane back from some dopers who stole it first. The agents had been staking out the island and the plane for some time. They saw the plane start the take-off roll and then they saw the dopers start firing their guns at the plane. They figured about 300 rounds were fired. The agents cornered the Beech after it landed to find out what was going on. They wanted to know what the heck had just happened. They wanted to know how the pilot got past their surveillance. They wanted to know how the pilot got past the dopers. As I listened to my fellow pilot's tale, I started to remember those days from a long time ago. I keep those memories to myself though. Most folks hear those stories and associate the pilot with being a reckless cowboy. I have to maintain a reputation as a professional pilot, so I just keep quiet. Maybe some day after I reach the official old pilot age of 60, when I don't need my professional reputation any more, I'll write a book. D. "But it is too late for me, my son. I've been branded a Union Cowboy for about eleven years now. Hisss Hisss {8^# Obi-Wan never told you what happened to young Doug Skywalker. Hisss Hissss, He got a real airline job and avoided the dark side.... But it's not too late... The hot-dog force is strong in you... You can destroy the FAA Administrator, he has foreseen this... this is why he won't let you tell tall flying stories on Usenet (under your own name, anyway!) Join me, and together we'll write the story of RAH, and rule the internet as Aviation Brothers! Sorry, I lost myself in the part there for a minute... I was called "the duke" by co-pilots when our South Pacific base first opened up; a reference to my raging around the system wearing an indiana jones-type hat. I way exceeded my authority out there on a regular basis, including refusal to use autopilots into the P.I. until the map shift issue was resolved and stuffing mailboxes with organizing letters. I was given extra "cowboy" line checks, but passed them all, so I know what you're talking about. Yes I heard that Florida stuff was exciting. Love to hear some "ficticious" stories about that area from you Doug. Tom Clancy always gets away with it by just using the blanket statement "its just fiction." He's carefull to change the names completely and twist the details around so that any pursuit will come up empty-handed. What the hell. You only live once. pac "rawhide" plyer |
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