a grand day out
Aug. 26th, 2013 10:05 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
We had our bank holiday early and are working today, but on Friday we drove a couple of hundred miles across the country to see THIS PLANE in flight.

It is a Catalina, a flying boat (you pronounce that like one word, with the emphasis on the first syllable: “FLYingboat”), the oldest airworthy amphibian plane in the UK. It can land on water or land. This one was built in Canada in 1943 – it spent part of its life as a waterbombing firefighter! (Full details of its history here). It was in Oban on Friday as part of a five-day tour around Britain to commemorate, and indeed to recreate without incident, the 100th anniversary of the Circuit of Britain Race flown by Harry Hawker in 1913. (More on its progress here.)
I once had a lesson in a seaplane – this Piper PA-18 Super Cub, which also happens to be the oldest aircraft I have ever flown, built in 1954 – I flew it from Loch Earn to Loch Tay and back again, and used the experience (with added spice) in my short story “Chain of Events” (in Rush Hour: Reckless, edited by Michael Cart). I have a secret desire to become an accomplished seaplane pilot, buy my own amphibious aircraft (possibly a Teal), and spend the rest of my days loch-hopping. So when I heard the Catalina, one of a dying breed, was coming to Oban, I put the date in my diary and Tim and I took the day off work to go see it.
We arrived at Oban Airport just as the Catalina was finishing its flying display and coming in to land!

There were a ton of people out taking pictures (where did they hear about this, anyway?), and there was a little craft sale going on in the hangar. The flight school was open and… well, one of the instructors, Graham Dawson, used to work at Perth so we knew him, and Tim had brought his flight bag and his license is current, so we hired the school’s Cessna 172 and went for a flight around the Inner Hebrides.

Like you do. Because you’re there and the plane’s available.
Guys, it was just unbelievably beautiful, and one of the coolest spontaneous days off we’ve ever had. We flew over the grass airstrip on Mull.

We saw Staffa

and Fingal’s Cave

[cue Mendelssohn] all from the air. We flew over Iona and saw the abbey.



There is a whole lot of nothing out there, just sea cliffs and inaccessible white beaches and green mountains and ruined castles.


And all within a hundred miles or so of home—accessible if you know how and if you are careful.
I was so glad we had Graham along, partly because he was extremely conscious of where the good fields were to glide to if the engine failed and which passes to avoid in case the clouds closed in, but mainly because he knew this landscape like the back of his hand and could point out things like the Dutchman’s Cap and the Atlantic Bridge.
We landed just as the rain started and then stood in line for about forty minutes to get a look at the interior of the Catalina. The “blisters” are an original feature (though the glass has been replaced) and were used for loading and unloading crew when the plane was parked on water. We climbed in just as a pair of nonagenarian former Catalina crew were climbing out. They were awesome. (Very agile, too.)
Bonuses: Catalina and pipe band.

Also, I just love this shot of them refueling - so many caring hands crawling all over this old plane.

We got home just in time for me to make supper for Mark before driving out to Jane Yolen’s house in St. Andrew’s for Bob Harris’s book launch—his hilarious The Day the World Went Loki has just been released by Floris Books.
A pretty darn awesome day of skiving.

It is a Catalina, a flying boat (you pronounce that like one word, with the emphasis on the first syllable: “FLYingboat”), the oldest airworthy amphibian plane in the UK. It can land on water or land. This one was built in Canada in 1943 – it spent part of its life as a waterbombing firefighter! (Full details of its history here). It was in Oban on Friday as part of a five-day tour around Britain to commemorate, and indeed to recreate without incident, the 100th anniversary of the Circuit of Britain Race flown by Harry Hawker in 1913. (More on its progress here.)
I once had a lesson in a seaplane – this Piper PA-18 Super Cub, which also happens to be the oldest aircraft I have ever flown, built in 1954 – I flew it from Loch Earn to Loch Tay and back again, and used the experience (with added spice) in my short story “Chain of Events” (in Rush Hour: Reckless, edited by Michael Cart). I have a secret desire to become an accomplished seaplane pilot, buy my own amphibious aircraft (possibly a Teal), and spend the rest of my days loch-hopping. So when I heard the Catalina, one of a dying breed, was coming to Oban, I put the date in my diary and Tim and I took the day off work to go see it.
We arrived at Oban Airport just as the Catalina was finishing its flying display and coming in to land!

There were a ton of people out taking pictures (where did they hear about this, anyway?), and there was a little craft sale going on in the hangar. The flight school was open and… well, one of the instructors, Graham Dawson, used to work at Perth so we knew him, and Tim had brought his flight bag and his license is current, so we hired the school’s Cessna 172 and went for a flight around the Inner Hebrides.

Like you do. Because you’re there and the plane’s available.
Guys, it was just unbelievably beautiful, and one of the coolest spontaneous days off we’ve ever had. We flew over the grass airstrip on Mull.

We saw Staffa

and Fingal’s Cave

[cue Mendelssohn] all from the air. We flew over Iona and saw the abbey.



There is a whole lot of nothing out there, just sea cliffs and inaccessible white beaches and green mountains and ruined castles.


And all within a hundred miles or so of home—accessible if you know how and if you are careful.
I was so glad we had Graham along, partly because he was extremely conscious of where the good fields were to glide to if the engine failed and which passes to avoid in case the clouds closed in, but mainly because he knew this landscape like the back of his hand and could point out things like the Dutchman’s Cap and the Atlantic Bridge.
We landed just as the rain started and then stood in line for about forty minutes to get a look at the interior of the Catalina. The “blisters” are an original feature (though the glass has been replaced) and were used for loading and unloading crew when the plane was parked on water. We climbed in just as a pair of nonagenarian former Catalina crew were climbing out. They were awesome. (Very agile, too.)
Bonuses: Catalina and pipe band.

Also, I just love this shot of them refueling - so many caring hands crawling all over this old plane.

We got home just in time for me to make supper for Mark before driving out to Jane Yolen’s house in St. Andrew’s for Bob Harris’s book launch—his hilarious The Day the World Went Loki has just been released by Floris Books.
A pretty darn awesome day of skiving.
no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 10:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 11:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 02:38 pm (UTC)tanita sighs...
Date: 2013-08-26 04:40 pm (UTC)We always intended to get there for a meditation weekend or some such (I'm terrible at that) - or just to see it - but we never did.
How wonderful that you spontaneously just -- DID it. Much better use of a bank holiday than I ever made!
no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 08:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 08:32 pm (UTC)Re: tanita sighs...
Date: 2013-08-26 08:33 pm (UTC)I foolishly didn't think how homesick this post might make you. <3
no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 08:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-26 08:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-27 12:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-31 01:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-31 09:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-31 10:00 am (UTC)Hey, I love your icon. Do you know the Peter Schickle song using those words? I have Joan Baez singing it - it's amazing. (It's also on my "mordred songs" mix.)
no subject
Date: 2013-08-31 11:08 am (UTC)(Here is my Edinburgh Castle pic, which also seems semi-appropriate. :))
Happy ROSE Release Day in U.S.
Date: 2013-09-10 10:19 pm (UTC)What fun to see your recent post about flying in the Catalina, with gorgeous photos of your views from the air. Aviation buff Robin is terribly jealous that I got to fly on many Catalinas during my childhood in Alaska. Since I was plagued by motion sickness, those low, bumpy flights were torture. As an adult, thankfully, I rarely get airsick. Can't wait to show Robin your Catalina photos.
I guess your flight wasn't long enough to fly over St. Kilda, which enchanted me years ago when I read Colin Baxter's gorgeous book about it, full of photos of its high cliffs and stone buildings deserted in 1930 when its last residents--whose ancestors had been there since the Bronze Age--left for the mainland. Your flight prompted me to search online for St. Kilda. How disappointing that it's now occupied by military operations!
You might recall that when my camera stopped working in the castle gardens, you (or your daughter?) took a photo or two of us with your mobile phone. If they turned out, I'll send you my e-mail address so you can pass them on.
Most of all, our thanks are long overdue for the lovely day you shared with us.
Re: Happy ROSE Release Day in U.S.
Date: 2013-10-21 02:00 pm (UTC)I love your reminiscences of Catalinas... I guess I'm not jealous because I really *hate* being airsick. And I, too, am a big fan of Colin Baxter. When I first came to the UK as an adult in the 1980s I used to make a point of seeking out his postcards to send people. I even have a deck of cards with Colin Baxter photos on the back!