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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in news ![]() Bertie Clay Lacy, movie photographer, and race pilot, used to carry a HUGE Snoopy Dog with him stuffed in the back of his Omni Insurance Co.sponsored Mustang. Yes, I remember that. Snoopy was "in" then, of course.. Girls loved that dog!! Got me a BEAR!!! Girls love bears better than dogs!! Yep. Also it's a long standing tradition. A lot of pilots from WW1 had teddy bears, and some even carried live animals with them (presumably to keep them warm) Bertie Roscoe Turner even had a pet Lion. Some guys will do ANYTHING to attract girls, but I have to admit.....that Bear created some GREAT times!! :-)) Hmm, neverr really got any action out of my bear! Roscoe must have with that lion, though. Gilmore,after his sponsers, of course. Bertie |
#2
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in news ![]() Bertie Clay Lacy, movie photographer, and race pilot, used to carry a HUGE Snoopy Dog with him stuffed in the back of his Omni Insurance Co.sponsored Mustang. Yes, I remember that. Snoopy was "in" then, of course.. Girls loved that dog!! Got me a BEAR!!! Girls love bears better than dogs!! Yep. Also it's a long standing tradition. A lot of pilots from WW1 had teddy bears, and some even carried live animals with them (presumably to keep them warm) Bertie Roscoe Turner even had a pet Lion. Some guys will do ANYTHING to attract girls, but I have to admit.....that Bear created some GREAT times!! :-)) Hmm, neverr really got any action out of my bear! Roscoe must have with that lion, though. Gilmore,after his sponsers, of course. Bertie Come to think of it, almost every picture I ever saw of Turner with Gilmore, he was smiling :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
#3
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Hmm, neverr really got any action out of my bear! Roscoe must have with that lion, though. Gilmore,after his sponsers, of course. Bertie Come to think of it, almost every picture I ever saw of Turner with Gilmore, he was smiling :-)) Those guys were like rock stars back then. I think he had to give Gilmore to a zoo when he got to be to big to manage. Bertie |
#4
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in : Hmm, neverr really got any action out of my bear! Roscoe must have with that lion, though. Gilmore,after his sponsers, of course. Bertie Come to think of it, almost every picture I ever saw of Turner with Gilmore, he was smiling :-)) Those guys were like rock stars back then. I think he had to give Gilmore to a zoo when he got to be to big to manage. Bertie I remember reading something to that effect I think, way back in the stone age someplace. Ole' Roscoe must have been quite a fellow. Those early pilots really had what it took. Flying some of those old crates was taking your life in you hands even before you made it to pattern altitude. I think it was Andy Sephton, check pilot for the Shuttleworth collection who said he considers the Bleriot monoplane one of the trickist airplanes he has ever flown. -- Dudley Henriques |
#5
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Hmm, neverr really got any action out of my bear! Roscoe must have with that lion, though. Gilmore,after his sponsers, of course. Bertie Come to think of it, almost every picture I ever saw of Turner with Gilmore, he was smiling :-)) Those guys were like rock stars back then. I think he had to give Gilmore to a zoo when he got to be to big to manage. Bertie I remember reading something to that effect I think, way back in the stone age someplace. Ole' Roscoe must have been quite a fellow. Those early pilots really had what it took. Flying some of those old crates was taking your life in you hands even before you made it to pattern altitude. I think it was Andy Sephton, check pilot for the Shuttleworth collection who said he considers the Bleriot monoplane one of the trickist airplanes he has ever flown. I've flown a model of one and it was a handful. Minimal power and massive drag and the wing warping made life very interesting as well. On top of that, the engine overheated and died after about ten minutes of flight! But the contraptions that Roscoe was flying were truly scary on a whole 'nuther level. That Wedell Williams with the Hornet must have been positively evil to fly. And of course he crashed that airplane earlier due to carb ice. Bertie |
#6
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Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Dudley Henriques wrote in : Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dudley Henriques wrote in : Hmm, neverr really got any action out of my bear! Roscoe must have with that lion, though. Gilmore,after his sponsers, of course. Bertie Come to think of it, almost every picture I ever saw of Turner with Gilmore, he was smiling :-)) Those guys were like rock stars back then. I think he had to give Gilmore to a zoo when he got to be to big to manage. Bertie I remember reading something to that effect I think, way back in the stone age someplace. Ole' Roscoe must have been quite a fellow. Those early pilots really had what it took. Flying some of those old crates was taking your life in you hands even before you made it to pattern altitude. I think it was Andy Sephton, check pilot for the Shuttleworth collection who said he considers the Bleriot monoplane one of the trickist airplanes he has ever flown. I've flown a model of one and it was a handful. Minimal power and massive drag and the wing warping made life very interesting as well. On top of that, the engine overheated and died after about ten minutes of flight! But the contraptions that Roscoe was flying were truly scary on a whole 'nuther level. That Wedell Williams with the Hornet must have been positively evil to fly. And of course he crashed that airplane earlier due to carb ice. Bertie Every now and then at some of our shows I'd get a chance to sit down and jaw awhile with the Formula 1 race pilots. Steve Whittman was at a few of these ("war stories" gab sessions) Steve had some amazing stuff from the "old days", and would have us all laughing like idiots telling us about flying some of the old planes. I actually got a taste of what he was talking about when I flew a Cassutt race plane one afternoon. Actually, you don't really FLY a Cassutt, you WEAR a Cassutt :-) Even the Pitts wasn't as sensitive on the controls as that beast. But it was great fun and I caught on quickly after it scared the s**t out of me on take off. I rotated and went to 100 feet before I could ease off the tiny bit of back pressure I had used to do that :-)) In my opinion, the guys who flew those early planes were REAL pilots!! :-)) -- Dudley Henriques |
#7
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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Every now and then at some of our shows I'd get a chance to sit down and jaw awhile with the Formula 1 race pilots. Steve Whittman was at a few of these ("war stories" gab sessions) Steve had some amazing stuff from the "old days", and would have us all laughing like idiots telling us about flying some of the old planes. I actually got a taste of what he was talking about when I flew a Cassutt race plane one afternoon. Actually, you don't really FLY a Cassutt, you WEAR a Cassutt :-) Even the Pitts wasn't as sensitive on the controls as that beast. But it was great fun and I caught on quickly after it scared the s**t out of me on take off. I rotated and went to 100 feet before I could ease off the tiny bit of back pressure I had used to do that :-)) In my opinion, the guys who flew those early planes were REAL pilots!! :-)) You were lucky to have met him. I'd seen him at Oshkosh and sun n fun a few times, but wasn't part ofthe elite that got to meet him. Any of those things had to be a handful. the fuselage area, even on the inline engined ones, was vast ahead of the CG and the tail surfaces tiny. Add that to some fairly sensitive wings and pilots with fairly limited experience in low performance airplanes and it's a wonder that any of them survived! Lots didn't, of course. Bertie |
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