
Straydog wrote:Hey Bill,
Yes it is, I'm just having a heckuva time finding a spot at SZP. The spot discussed earlier on Stearman Taxi is a nogo as of a few hours ago. I figured OXR is a sure bet even if only for a short time while I continue pounding the pavement at SZP. I would much rather find something at SZP but keeping my options open in case that doesn't pan out quickly enough. Sure would hate for Tim to have no place to drop it off.
Zack
porterjet wrote:I flew in and out of Oxnard quite a bit during the last ice age....The only compaint I would pass on is the summertime marine layer would sometimes hold us up even though we were IFR and the airport has a full ILS available.
Barnstormer wrote:porterjet wrote:I flew in and out of Oxnard quite a bit during the last ice age....The only compaint I would pass on is the summertime marine layer would sometimes hold us up even though we were IFR and the airport has a full ILS available.
During the last ice age when I flew out of Oxnard full IFR in a non-IFR plane never stopped us. 1983, and I was taking aerobatic lessons in a 150 Aerobat with Bob Gililland (sp?). This character was too old to fly in WWII, so they made him an instructor.
I recall many a day when I'd show up and the soup was all the way to the ground. Nothing was flying, not even the birds. Bob would arrive with a foot long submarine sandwich and we'd climb into the 150 and taxi out. The Aerobat hardly had anything but Needle, Ball, Airspeed. Bob would call the tower and they'd clear us for takeoff. As soon as we were out of the soup he turn the controls over to me, then eat the sandwich while I climbed to the aerobatic area. We'd do about 45 minutes of instruction, at which point I was about to puke, then it was straight and level with the windows open so I could try and recover.
By the time we got back to the airport the sun was always shining. He'd chew me out cause there'd be oil dripping off the tail - I loved hanging from the straps.
I asked him once why the controllers let us take off under those conditions. He explained that he learned to fly before there were instructors, and before planes had instrumentation, and before there were any restrictions (rules) about flying. He just climbed into a plane and taught himself how to fly. The controllers knew that.
It's easy to locate Bob's entries in my log book. He could write smaller then anyone. Fit an entire paragraph of information in the Remarks And Endorsements column - and it is legible!
Before I found Bob I began my search for an aerobatic instructor at Santa Paula. I wandered into this guy's hangar that had a Christen Eagle, but I couldn't afford the rental rate. I did notice a photo hanging over his desk. It was of a helicopter at the top of a loop. Yep, I was talking to Sammy Mason. Pretty cool.
MikesT182T wrote:Bob was my instructor when the airport was VTU (Ventura County) He signed me off for my first solo, and my PP checkride. I feel really fortunate to have had him as an instructor and exposure to aerobatics as a young teen! A couple years ago, I stopped by where Aero-flite had been and was sad to see it all gone... I had hoped someone was still there who could tell me some stories about Bob in the last few decades. But, no luck...I assume he has passed on, but if not, I wish I could visit him and say hi...
Barnstormer wrote:
I was hoping someone here had flown with Bob. Very cool. Like you I assume he's passed on. I wish I'd of taken the time to sit down, buy those old timers lunch, and listened to their stories.
. Would things like air compressors etc cause any alarm?Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest