John Works up a Sweat at
the Fly-In
Everyone has a place in reality or in the mind named Paradise. For some, it's
a place at sea level with a perfect sunrise where sky meets the water. For
others, it's a technical climb, with the team, up a granite rock face to touch
the high summit.
For me, it's that very private space at 2,000agl, mixing art and science into
what we pilots call flying. And over Middle America, flying slow and in
orderly little steps, Paradise is smooth green and wonderful as far as the eye
could see.
Let me tell you how I found it.
In planning aerial travel I'm thinking speed and efficiency, Clinton was a
long way from my usual haunts above the foothills and valleys of the
Appalachians. Being a text book "long cross-country", I again planned the
text book route. The Sectionals and WAC's were all marked in neat "Direct To"
logos, the fuel calculations were carefully planned to extract the maximum
range, the GPS databases were programmed to the tee to fit the flight to the
great circle route. But something more was slipping away again, and I almost
let it go entirely, but this time someone stopped me. I was on a short hop to
my wife's hometown airport to test the course deviation accuracy of my GPS
unit. I landed and called home just to let them know I had made it. When my
daughter answered the phone she was shocked. "Dad!" she said, that was too
fast! That's not you! I bet you didn't fly around Mom's old house, you didn't
fly around to the church where you and Mom got married, you didn't try to
chase those trains that come out of that railroad yard next to the river.
What's up? She was right. What's up was, I was leaving something very
important on the ground. The trip back home was quiet in more ways than one.
Back home at my desk, the Clinton trip was weighed down. Within my daughters
words I began to recall a chapter in a book I had written, in my mind, years
ago when I first realized the spirit in flying. I remembered something else
too. Another book, another author: WIND, SAND, AND STARS by Antoine de
Saint-Exupéry "It is not with metal the pilot is in contact. Contrary to the
vulgar illusion, it is thanks to the metal, and by virtue of it, that the
pilot rediscovers nature." "...the machine does not isolate man from the
great problems of nature but plunges him more deeply into them!"
What had been slowly dissolving away in a small, almost indiscernible fashion,
suddenly stopped, and took me by the hand and made me remember why I wanted to
fly. Call it that sense of wonder or the joy of the newborn, but with whatever
words are used, I went back to renew my journey west. And there they were,
scores of places with names as rich and true as the farmlands under and around
their runways. Defiance, Warsaw, DeKalb, Stark, and a handful of others now
more that just points in a database. I promised myself that these names would
be more that just a deviation from the great circle route, but a chance to
rekindle a dream.
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To make sure I held my promise true, nature delivered scattered to broken
layers at 3,000ft with slant range visibility 3-5 miles and a thunderstorm or
two thrown-in. This was fair enough I thought, to think and to feel, to touch
cold logic and warm emotions, to see America's heartland and not just flyover
it to get to some other place. And I was more than satisfied with this deal.
So there it was, just as promised and more than that I had
hoped for, the Land. Foreshortened in the mist, it took on a rich theatrical
feel. This is Act One. |
The green landscape opened under soft cotton cloud curtains to reveal
a beauty that I had almost totally forgotten. The neat geometry of the roads
and rails holding their towns in precise symmetry. Stilt legged water towers
with the proud name of the town or industry emblazoned on its' face, standing
sentry for the surrounding countryside. And even though you are hundreds of
feet above them, there are the people of this land, who reach out and wave
hello. Children swimming in a pond look up and wave. Farm workers walking from
their trucks, pause and look skyward at the sound of the engine and wave back
as I rock my wings in greeting. This is the connection, the bond, which says
that even though we cannot see your face or know exactly who you are,
greetings and welcome to our home. This is no idle sentiment or trite belief.
The people of the Village of Knox, Indiana, Stark County Airport to be exact,
extended that greeting to me with a friendliness that was palpable.
I had to land. Weather conditions were signaling that strong thunderstorms
were awaiting me the further west I flew. Stark was a planned fuel stop, so
now it became a refuge from the impending violent air. Another small Cessna
working the pattern heard my call, and noting the situation, offered to vacate
the pattern to allow me a straight in for 18, "so to get you on the ground and
secured a little faster", I thanked him for the courtesy and took him up on
the offer. At the fuel pump it was more of the same. The assistant manager of
the airport was a bit startled to hear that Butler, Pennsylvania was my
takeoff and that Clinton, Iowa was my ultimate destination and offered without
the least of hesitation or cost, a space in one of their new hangers to keep
this voyagers plane out of the cruel weather. What more needs to be said? But
it did not stop with this gracious offer. I asked if I could stay overnight in
the hanger because I wanted to get an early start the next day, weather
permitting. He would hear nothing of the sort. Phone calls were made, keys
were produced, and I found myself driving into town in a car the assistant
manager "borrowed" for the occasion, to stay at local hotel with a "special
rate" for airport business. "Just have dinner at the restaurant next door" he
told me. "The room will come with the meal-I called Astoria and she knows your
coming". For the record, the meal was great, the room was clean, and hot
water abundant. It was the perfect place to watch some of the most violent
thunderstorms I have seen in a long while.
The next morning, under water washed skies and sweet smelling corn, I shook
hands goodbye with many thanks and a promise to stop on my return trip. The
westward progress continued into Illinois and the second act of this drama
took the stage. I was near Chicago. 40nm to the north was the Metropolis. I
was flying at its fringes, but though the panorama is of a mechanical form,
all grays, blues, and blacks it has a heart and soul, just as vital and real
as the green earth only 10 nm away to the south. I know -I could see it and
feel it as I flew over the refineries and tank farms along the Illinois River.
As promised by our electronic servants in space and on land, the dirty weather
redeveloped. More thunderstorms and heavy winds barring the gate to the
Mississippi River. Whiteside Airport became the sanctuary and a place for
chance meetings. Sleep comes easy with soft chairs, a quiet room, and gray
skies and as there was not much activity in the building, I soon succumbed.
The muted voices of new visitors seeped through the partly closed door and not
wishing to monopolize the comfortable room, I opened the door wide.
Washed out of the sky like myself came Martha and Ken Ortmann
bound for the same destination trying hard to see through the weather and
knowing well that we were all grounded for a while. After the introductions,
their quiet time together, and the passing of the troublesome weather, three
people looked up at the sky and the question was asked. Shall we go? And with
conviction and a touch of finality, we went on. The finale was close at hand
and like any good sermon or drama, the climax was simple but visually
stunning.
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Again the curtain clouds slowly moved up and aside, and
the sun, high above the clouds, shone pearlescent rays upon the Mississippi
River and the panorama below. It was smooth air in the final steps
through Paradise. And when I landed, I knew two things immediately.
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The warm greeting of "Welcome to Clinton" was flavored by the same touch of
Paradise I had re-discovered.
And most of all, as the poet-pilot John Gillespie Magee wrote, I had "Put out
my hand and touched the face of God."

John Grinder
Butler, PA
N18579
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