Ever year in the UK volunteer pilots with their aircraft pick up WWII RAF vets from all over the country and fly them to a location where they have a mini reunion then take them home again...it's called Project Propeller
http://www.projectpropeller.co.uk/
Woke up on the morning and we are was 8/8 fog...not a great start to the day but knew it would clear...morning didn't improve much when I got up to the strip after driving through the fog and ripping back the hangar net thinking "ummm...the right wing was a little low" and was confronted with this....
...s*** !!
Managed to take the weight off the wheel by using my back to raise the wing via the strut and pumping at the same time...knew there was no way I'd be able to get some big tires on a Sat and could see the whole day turning extremely bad, so was relieved that after being pumped up it stayed up....
Picked up one passenger 15 mins away at an old WWII field called Kemble then about 10 minutes to another ex WWII one at Gloucester and then went to Old Warden , home of the Shuttleworth Collection...
http://www.shuttleworth.org/shuttleworth_home.asp
There were around 100 light aircraft there...
180 second to last at the bottom next to a C421
...with around 200 vets...
Great to see some vets from the last one I went to and it was good to see the old mates looking out for each other especially the ones who had found the tea and coffee a little mundane and when the word went round that the restaurant over the way served a nice pint, casting away their walking sticks as they made a bee-line for it...
Wonderful to see the queue of the guys lining up to get the CDs signed that were on sale, by the swing band era music group... I'm sure that was just for the memories the music brought back and not the fact that the ladies were in very trim khakis...
There was a great solo display by a P-40 and then it was time to go...
But I have to say that the highlight of my day was one of my passengers that I had the pleasure and the honour to collect at Kemble...I got the Belle of the Ball....
This lovely lady, Joy Lofthouse was a member of the ATA who ferried aircraft from the factories to the operation bases. She flew mostly Spitfires and 'some' Mustangs...
This is the rest of the crew...
Joe, Joy, Ken...the guys have flown with me before so I must be doing something right.
Terrific people all.
They are the 'Greatest Generation'.
