Yesterday I stood out on my patio and watched a wild and active squall line screaming in from the west. NOAA had issued tornado watches and to our north were tornado warnings. This fast moving front was full of maliciousness. It’s a good time to be on the ground.
In my flying career I had some experiences with the worst violent CBs (cumulus nimbus) and during that time watched science in boring detail only confirm what my first instructor, Buck Greenfield, warned me of. ‘Only the gods live in the CB, not man’. You never forget your first or worst encounter but, also, you tend not to forget any of them. The first was as a student in a T-craft. The shifting winds from a nearby CB had me chasing the wind sock around the runways of the wagon wheeled North Perry airport in the late summer 1956. A relieved instructor, Buck explained to me how wind near CB would seem to change direction and velocity at a whim, and the need to keep that in mind. This later would be codified by meteorologists as ‘micro burst’ and ‘wind shear’.
(Me as a lineboy in 1957)
But I was in for more instruction ‘la natural’ later. August 2, 1958. By this point I had my private license and was building time toward my commercial. My brother John and I sat out on a long cross country in the Luscombe 8a, my father had just bought ($2,500) just so we could build our flying time. Again the weather gods were laying for us nymphs. I headed north for GNV Gainesville with a fuel stop in Sebring. Out of Sebring the sky ahead grew nasty with huge towering Cumulus. At that point I was IFR (I follow roads). Up ahead I saw what looked like a path between heavy rain shafts and sunshine on the ground just beyond. What I actually saw was big open pits of white and yellow sand. I flew into a real sucker hole. Next the sky around me dumped its heavy wet load right on us. My visibility was fast departing and I pushed the old Luscombe over to maintain visual contact with the ground. My altimeter soon read 200’ and I found myself with a forward visibility of about ½ mile. I could just make out the pines trees and the path of the road I was following. I needed to do something fast. I reached over to grab a chart (the one my brother was using), a quick glance told me if I stayed on the road, I would come to a fork, and if I stayed to the left, Groveland airport would be ahead on the right side. I just had to hang on.
Sure enough the fork came up and I veered left staying to the right of the road. The rain came down harder and my visibility was about ¼ mile. Meanwhile my brother John had not said a word but was definitely watching out the right side. Suddenly, directly below me I saw a tetrahedron! It showed the wind was from the same direction I was flying. I was able to just discern an opening in the pines beneath me. John yelled “Runway!” I made a hard 360 left turn and lined up on what appeared to be nothing more than a lighter opening amongst the vast green of the pine trees.
At this point I was just feeling for the ground. We bounced hard than settled firmly on the ground. It was a rough runway and muddy. With the rain crashing down, mud flying, all I tried to do was keep the airplane level and straight. As the airplane started to slow I became aware of “objects” going passed the airplane. Bushes? I could not discern what they were. Soon we hit a big bump, the airplane bounced and rolled quickly to a stop. Up right and engine running.
It was some time before the rain let up and my brother and I were able to get out of the cockpit and survey the Luscombe and our surroundings. The airplane was fine even though throughout the rain and the landing she sounded like she was coming apart. But the rest of our discoveries - - - well it left me wondering. For we had actually landed in a cow pasture- - - full of cows - - - who were now in a somewhat state of panic. Those “objects” I was aware of during the landing were those cows, we were barely missing! And what I thought was mud was the “cow pies” i.e. manure being kicked up by the wheels. The bottom of the wings and parts of the windshield were covered with it. The big bump we hit just before stopping was either a cow path or very shallow drainage ditch. Off to our left I could see the tetrahedron, firmly encased in vines, making it unmovable even in a hurricane!
Over to our right was a house. The oddity of it was, it was built on top of a hangar which contained no airplane but a tractor. At this point we noticed a lady standing there, hands on hips and in a state of panic just like the cows. What kind of airport is this?
The answer is, it had been an airport – once. The chart I had grabbed from my brother was over 4 years old (my newer chart showed no airport at all) and thus as confirmed by the lady, had been closed about 4 years. Well, the skies, the cows and the lady all simmered down after awhile. The three of us herded the cows off to one end of the pasture and my brother and I fired up the somewhat smelly Luscombe and bounced our way into the air.
In all my years I never forgot the very details of that day. One that lived on to form a life time goal. You see that was the first time I had ever seen or heard of an airport home. To live on an airport with my own hangar, own runway, became a life long endeavor that to this very day, is one of the dreams I’ve been able to fulfill.
Same Subject forward to mid summer 1962.
I am now a newborn DC-3 co-pilot flying for DuPont Aero Finance out of MIA. Every day we fly a 10 leg group of trips for Bahamas Airway between
The trips are easy, short, and almost always perfect with weather. But there are days. On this particular day I learned that not all captains should be captains. But when they are captain, they ARE the captain. Period. At least that was back then. Now with the new concept of cockpit crew management and leadership, calling out a captain with an obvious flaw in his command decision has enhanced safety though the industry. Not back then.
The weather along the Gulf Stream that flows north along the
We and our trusty DC-3 were headed for
Suddenly we are out of it. All of it. The CB has literally pissed us out of its bottom. We are in clear air and it’s almost smooth. The captain quickly brings the engines back with the throttle and calls for cruise RPM. As I finish setting the RPM, I happen to look over at the captain but I immediately could only focus on what I saw beyond him. For there, not a ½ mile off our left wing, was a silver, snaking, wavering, water spout.
I’ll not go into all the details with a long story, except some 2 or 3 months later I’m at a meeting with my boss and our chief pilot. My observations and those of others got this captain fired. Sometime after that I did some soul searching, listened to the older sister of a school friend, made my confession of faith and was baptized (full dunking brother). That December, I quit the airline, and enlisted in the Army (I was about to be drafted). But just before that I met a beautiful black haired, almond eyed beauty. Neither she nor I knew we’d be man and wife some 3 years later but I knew the moment I saw her I was in love. And where did I meet her? On the very steps of the church where I was baptized.