We planned it to be a leisurely journey so we
left Willits, California (O28) Saturday afternoon, 24 May 03 and flew to
Willows, California. Our friends from Ruth, California (Tom and Carol Oczkewecz)
would meet us there Sunday morning and we planned to continue on to Kitty Hawk
as a loose flight of two. As luck or the lack of it often happens, the airport
at Ruth was socked in most of the day Sunday and they couldn’t leave until
late in the afternoon. We flew on to Yerington, Nevada and waited. Susan and I
hooked our “airshow chairs” to the tie-downs on the wing and relaxed in the
shade of the wings until the 182 caught up with us. Having seen enough of
Yerington, we used the daylight that was left to fly on to Ely, Nevada for the
night. By the time we got there things were closed up tight. We set up tents
under the wings and slept the night away.
The next morning fuel was leaking from Tom’s
left wing tank. We continued on in the Fairchild while Tom made arrangements to
have the fuel leak fixed. Tom and Carol caught up with us in Kinston, North
Carolina.
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We are attempting to cross into Tennessee
over the Smoky Mountains.
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Our next stop was planned for Brice Canyon,
Arizona but when we got there the density altitude was above eleven thousand
feet so we continued on looking for something lower and cooler. We landed at
Page airport near Lake Powell. That is a great place to stop. As we taxied up to
the transit ramp, a lineman was waving us into a parking place. This lineman did
what they all seem to do, he stood directly centered on the tie-down spot where
it is impossible to see him over the long nose of the Fairchild. All I could do
was to sit there with the engine ticking over until he got the idea and moved
over to one side. Susan was about to dismount and go explain the problem but he
moved over first. These folks have a first class operation. The two FBO linemen
flipped a coin to see who would sell the fuel (I didn’t have a preference). We
got a ride to the lounge in their 4-wheeler and they gave us a ride to a Mexican
restaurant for dinner (I call the evening meal supper). From there we flew on to
Grants, New Mexico. On the way Susan took many fantastic pictures (by the time
we got back to California, she’d taken over two thousand high resolution
digital photographs). After spending the night in Grants (the motel owner picked
us up and delivered us to the airport), we flew to Tucumcari. There we refueled
and topped off the oil and I bought an antique HF aircraft radio transmitter
from the lineman. It was in unused condition and still had the 3105-kilocycle
crystal in it. I’ll add it to my collection.
From Tucumcari we went on to Clinton,
Oklahoma where we landed on the grass runway. It was late and the FBO was closed
but someone in another hangar arranged for us to use the courtesy car (an old
city police car) and we spent the night in a local hotel. We had originally
planned our next stop at Lexington, Tennessee but while we were at the Page,
Arizona airport we read about Drake Field at Fayetteville, Arkansas. We were
told that the restaurant on the field had some of the best barbeque to be found
anywhere. So we diverted to Drake Field. Now that’s a nice place to stop! It
is a beautiful airport with nicely cut green grass everywhere. The control tower
was very accommodating and friendly, the barbeque was as advertised, fuel
delivery was efficient, and everything was clean and well supplied. As usual the
Fairchild attracted a lot of attention, and as we were leaving, the line crew
asked us to make a low pass over the runway for pictures. The tower gave us
permission without hesitation and said he’d get out his own camera. Troy
Bates, the flight line supervisor, has posted his pictures on his very
interesting web site: http://comp.uark.edu/~cbates/Aviation/May2003/page_01.htm
From Drake Field we flew on to Lexington,
Tennessee, spent the night, and from there to Crossville, Tennessee. The next
planned stop was to be in North Carolina but the clouds over the Great Smoky
Mountains were too high to fly over and too low to fly under so we turned back
and landed at Morristown, Tennessee for the night (courtesy car there too). The
next morning the weather had improved so we could fly the rest of the way to
North Carolina. The destination was Kinston (ISO) but the tower said that our
radio was not working well enough for them to copy. When I switched to the
handheld radio I couldn’t hear them due to some interference from a broadcast
station. My Icom model IC-A22 handheld radio was in the back seat under all the
camping equipment.
I then flew on to New Bern and by that time
figured out how to call them on the Vertex Standard VXA-700 handheld and receive
on the Icom-200 panel mounted radio. As I approached the New Bern airport the
tower asked if I was familiar with the area. My reply was that I flew from that
airport on a regular basis a little over 45 years ago. He remarked, “Well, the
river is still in the same place”. That’s the only thing that is the same! I
landed at New Bern, gassed up and went back to Kinston.
At Kinston I parked on the North Carolina Forest
Service Ramp. They were expecting me and had a tie-down spot all ready. That was
on Friday 30 May and the Fairchild rested there until the following Friday
morning. Tom and Carol in the Cessna 182 caught up with us on Wednesday evening
(28 May) at Kinston. Susan was spending the week at Myrtle Beach South Carolina
with my sister while I was working in Kinston. After leaving Kinston the panel
mounted worked just fine and it still does. The only place that had a problem
with it was the Kinston tower.
Friday morning Tom and Carol flew directly to
First Flight airport at Kitty Hawk while I went to Myrtle Beach to pick up
Susan. After a short visit there we flew on to Kitty Hawk. First flight airport
was a great disappointment. The museum was not completed, nor was the AOPA
building. Tom learned that we were not allowed to camp overnight in our tents.
Weather was closing in on us and if we couldn’t camp overnight we had to get
out of there right away. We took some pictures, I did a fly-by of the memorial
for pictures and we took off for Chapel Hill.
I was not comfortable with the fuel I had on
board so I landed at Rocky Mount for gasoline while Tom flew on to Chapel Hill.
We ran into a lot of nice folks at Rocky Mount who wanted us to stay for their
open house and air show the next two days. They offered to put the Fairchild in
the hangar and get us transportation to a hotel. We couldn’t stay because Tom
was waiting for us at Chapel Hill, Williams Field.
The Chapel Hill airport had changed a lot also.
When I used to fly in there over 45 years ago it was a huge circular grass
field. Now there is a long paved runway and other facilities. It is a shame that
the university wants to close it.
After spending the night in Chapel Hill, we flew
back to Rocky Mount for the Sunday part of the open house and air show. They
parked me next to a WWII A26 so the public could get a look at the Fairchild.
The local Civil Air Patrol posted a Cadet with the plane to make sure the
non-flying visitors didn’t poke holes in the fabric or climb on the airplane.
That was very much appreciated. It was raining on and off most of the day and
that put a damper on some of the events. The field stayed barely VFR all day. We
left in the late afternoon. I flew under the clouds through the passes into
Tennessee and landed at Morristown, Tennessee. Tom and Carol tried to fly over
the clouds but couldn’t stay VFR so they turned back and landed at Hickory,
North Carolina. We waited for them at Morristown and then we continued West
reversing our old tracks. The original plan was to cut north and go through the
Dakotas, but the weather in that direction was not cooperating.
On the way back to California we stopped back at
Drake Field for some more of that good barbeque and this time used their car and
spent the night. At Tucumcari we made an overnight stop and in the morning Steve
Floeck at the FBO gave us each a freshly laid ostrich egg. After we got back
Susan and her mother drained about one and a half quarts from a hole drilled in
the end and we enjoyed casseroles and scrambled egg for a while.
Another noteworthy stop was at Jean, Nevada.
There is nothing there but an airport and two huge high-rise Hotel-Casinos. The
Hotel picked us up at the airport and we were surprised to be charged only $8.00
plus tax (total $17.00) for a real nice room. That evening we went down to the
Casino and I lost about $75.00 in the quarter slots. Susan broke even. I didn’t
mind because I just figured I’d now paid about the right price for the room.
On the way out the next morning I gave the slot machine another try. On about
the third try I got three sevens and won it all back plus a few dollars. The
stay that night was free.
I stopped one more time before home at Yerington,
Nevada for fuel and oil. The Ranger engine uses about a quart of oil per hour
and we had used up the case I brought along for the places that didn’t have
oil. Everyone we met along the way was extremely nice except at Yerington. After
buying fuel from the self-service tank, I went over to an open hangar where two
people were working on a couple of airplanes. I spoke to one of them and asked
where I might find some oil. He didn’t even speak, just turned his back and
walked away. Finally after a while the other one talked to me just long enough
to tell me there was no aviation oil available to me on the field. We walked
into town and bought enough oil at an auto parts store to get us home.
We arrived back at Willits, California just
before dark as the full moon was rising. It was Friday the thirteenth. The
overall trip had been great. The engine only quit once during the trip and after
switching to the tank with fuel in it things got back to normal quickly. We
spent 81 hours in the air, with the side trips and zigzags flew over seven
thousand miles, burned about 800 gallons of gasoline, and used 20 gallons of
oil. It was worth it.
Clyde Davis
Fairchild, NC81242