13 October 2012, 07:48
Norman ConquestFalcons Of France
This is a great book + a great reminiscence of my childhood.American Flyers in WW1 in the Lafayette Escadrille. Brought to you by Nordhoff + Hall,the 2 lads who wrote "Mutiny on the Bounty".Required reading in my opinion but definately recommended.
14 October 2012, 20:25
meteHere in NY we have the Rhinebeck Aerodrome where the have a fascinating Working !! collection of WWI planes .They put on a show each weekend about 6 months of the year. All the reading you do suddenly comes alive as you see these complex, fragile bits of fabric and wood take to the air !
15 October 2012, 07:25
billrquimbyMy first flights weren't in a plane built of "fragile bits of fabric and wood," but it was close.
One my jobs in high school in the early 1950s was to load and flag for a cropduster in Yuma, Arizona. His plane was a Stearman biplane, and I donned goggles and a respirator and rode in its hopper to the various fields that he dusted.
Most of the stuff he spread over the fields was the now-banned DDT. It was used on everything in those days, including every "mojado" (wetback laborer) the border patrol detained.
I probably breathed and ingested through contact enough of that pesticide to kill every bug in two states.
At any rate, Woody (the pilot) was a crazy guy. Every morning, he would take off and spin the wheels of his Stearman on the roof of a little cafe where an especially busty waitress worked.
His license was suspended briefly for flying under the bridge across the Colorado River.
He did not die in a plane crash, though. He froze to death while hunting elk in the early 1970s, when Arizona's high country was hit by a huge snow and ice storm.
They found his body the next spring under a juniper tree. There were burned matchbooks where he had tried to start a fire.
Bill Quimby
15 October 2012, 07:38
billrquimbyMy first flights weren't in a plane built of "fragile bits of fabric and wood," but it was close.
One my jobs in high school in the early 1950s was to load and flag for a cropduster in Yuma, Arizona. His plane was a Stearman biplane, and I donned goggles and a respirator and rode in its hopper to the various fields that he dusted.
Most of the stuff he spread over the fields was the now-banned DDT. It was used on everything in those days, including all "mojados" (wetback laborers) the border patrol detained.
I probably breathed and ingested through contact with enough of that pesticide to kill every insect in two states.
Bill Quimby
15 October 2012, 08:04
Norman ConquestCheck Amazon. For those who have'nt read it,I envy you your first reading.