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Oshkosh 2003 Redux



 
 
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  #11  
Old August 7th 03, 05:41 AM
Jack Allison
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In our case, the sleeping bags were on an air mattress...mine must have been
touching a part of the tent that leaked. Oh, and the trick for keeping the
clothes dry? Keep then in the plane...assuming, of course, that the plane
doesn't leak.

--
Jack Allison
PP-ASEL

"When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth
with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there
you will always long to return"
- Leonardo Da Vinci

(Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail)


  #12  
Old August 8th 03, 04:14 AM
Orval Fairbairn
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In article ,
"Morgans" post/the/group.here.net wrote:

"Jack Allison" wrote

The tricky part at OSH is trying to
dry out a sleeping bag between storms.


The trick at OSH is to not let that sleeping bag get wet in the first
place.g

Really, with a queen sized air bed, it isn't that hard, keeping the bag out
of the water.

Keeping the clothes out of the water has been the hard part for me!
--
---Jim in NC---



The best trick is to have relatives or friends who live in Oshkosh.

We got there on Tuesday, got parked in the Far South 40. Went back on
Wed. AM to see if we could move to a better parking spot. I had Linda
save a spot in the Classic area while another friend and I went to get
the plane. Along the way, I suggested that we try a "legal" move and
contacted the Vintage volunteers.

They gave me a prime spot, just a few planes away from the
giraffe-painted Sikorsky S-39 and the zebra-painted S-38. We went back
to Linda and told her that we had a better parking spot and to meet us
at the Aeroshell motorhome.

It was a good thin that we released her, as it began to pour rain just
after we got to the plane! The old Johnson Rocket got a prime spot.

I got to see the ill-fated Hughes Racer (wht a magnificent piece of
art!). I think that it was scheduled to fly on Thursday, but the rain
interrupted that demo. I was shocked to read this week that both it and
Jim Wright were lost in Yellowstone Park. My condolences to everybody.

--
To get random signatures put text files into a folder called ³Random Signatures² into your Preferences folder.
  #13  
Old August 8th 03, 03:55 PM
Margy Natalie
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Jack Allison wrote:. The tricky part at OSH is trying to

dry out a sleeping bag between storms. You walk outside after a seminar or
after going through the booths, see nasty dark clouds, hear a thunder clap
and *know* you won't make it back to your camp before it starts raining. My
bag finally dried out after about three days. Felt like I was sleeping in a
sponge the first night after it got wet. Ah, but it was all worth it
though. I'm hooked and already thinking about next year.


The "trick" is to hang things inside!! We have a HUGE tent (Eureka - "The
Lodge") that has a sleeping room and a porch (no floor). Both rooms have huge
windows and we keep the ones in the sleeping room closed at ALL times we are
away from the tent. Both rooms have rings you can hang ropes from for drying
things and for hammocks for stuff you want to keep off the ground. We do string
a laundry line outside also, but only for things we have duplicates of (towels,
etc.). We have a queen size air mattress so the bags don't get wet. I also
pack a couple of days clothes in plastic bags. Sometimes I just leave a bunch
of things in the plane for dryness sake. You really can stay high and dry in
OSH with a bit of advance planning.

Margy

  #14  
Old August 8th 03, 06:10 PM
Michael Pilla
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"Margy Natalie" wrote in message
...


Jack Allison wrote:. The tricky part at OSH is trying to

dry out a sleeping bag between storms. You walk outside after a seminar

or
after going through the booths, see nasty dark clouds, hear a thunder

clap
and *know* you won't make it back to your camp before it starts raining.

My
bag finally dried out after about three days. Felt like I was sleeping

in a
sponge the first night after it got wet. Ah, but it was all worth it
though. I'm hooked and already thinking about next year.


The "trick" is to hang things inside!! We have a HUGE tent (Eureka - "The
Lodge") that has a sleeping room and a porch (no floor). Both rooms have

huge
windows and we keep the ones in the sleeping room closed at ALL times we

are
away from the tent. Both rooms have rings you can hang ropes from for

drying
things and for hammocks for stuff you want to keep off the ground. We do

string
a laundry line outside also, but only for things we have duplicates of

(towels,
etc.). We have a queen size air mattress so the bags don't get wet. I

also
pack a couple of days clothes in plastic bags. Sometimes I just leave a

bunch
of things in the plane for dryness sake. You really can stay high and dry

in
OSH with a bit of advance planning.

Margy


I'll second Margy's comments about hanging things up. I even was able to do
this in a small, backpack tent that I carried with me on a business trips
some years and was able to steal a couple of days at OSH. In my case, I
just had to be sure that nothing touched the rip-stop fabric (avoid wicking,
obviously), but it was doable even in a small tent. In my larger tent, it
was a piece of cake. Thanks for the reminder, Margy.

As an aside, there's nothing like trying to sleep in a tiny, orange rip-stop
nylon tent when lightning is all around. You would swear that the tent blew
away and the light part of the "show" is right above you. Eventually, I got
used to it. :-)

Michael Pilla


  #15  
Old August 8th 03, 06:39 PM
Morgans
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I'll second Margy's comments about hanging things up. I even was able to
do
this in a small, backpack tent that I carried with me on a business trips
some years and was able to steal a couple of days at OSH. In my case, I
just had to be sure that nothing touched the rip-stop fabric (avoid

wicking,
obviously), but it was doable even in a small tent. In my larger tent, it
was a piece of cake. Thanks for the reminder, Margy.

As an aside, there's nothing like trying to sleep in a tiny, orange

rip-stop
nylon tent when lightning is all around. You would swear that the tent

blew
away and the light part of the "show" is right above you. Eventually, I

got
used to it. :-)

Michael Pilla


My trick is a small rubbermaid type of organizer, then sit the suitcase
(soft sides) up on top of that. My tent is too small for hanging much.
--
Jim in NC--


  #16  
Old August 8th 03, 06:59 PM
Montblack
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("Michael Pilla" wrote)
snip
As an aside, there's nothing like trying to sleep in a tiny, orange

rip-stop
nylon tent when lightning is all around. You would swear that the tent

blew
away and the light part of the "show" is right above you. Eventually, I

got
used to it. :-)


One word: Dorms :-)

--
Montblack


  #17  
Old August 8th 03, 08:06 PM
Jay Honeck
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One word: Dorms :-)

It's funny -- I've had several people who stayed in the dorms come to me,
offering their sincere and heartfelt condolences for our "terrible time"
spent camping at Oshkosh this year. (We lost our tent in the first
storm...)

As wet as the week was, I still wouldn't have traded places with you. To be
able to wake up on the field each morning and see 11,000 airplanes parked
wingtip-to-wingtip, as far as the eye can see -- man, there's nothing else
like it.

When it comes to Oshkosh, I'm drip-dry!
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"


  #18  
Old August 8th 03, 08:25 PM
Dave Butler
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Jay Honeck wrote:

It's funny -- I've had several people who stayed in the dorms come to me,
offering their sincere and heartfelt condolences for our "terrible time"
spent camping at Oshkosh this year. (We lost our tent in the first
storm...)


Lost your tent??? Wow! As in "...where did our tent go?"???


As wet as the week was, I still wouldn't have traded places with you. To be
able to wake up on the field each morning and see 11,000 airplanes parked
wingtip-to-wingtip, as far as the eye can see -- man, there's nothing else
like it.

When it comes to Oshkosh, I'm drip-dry!


Me, too! I tried staying the dorms the last 2 years after getting thoroughly
soaked in my tent 3 years ago, but I missed waking up on the field. There's
nothing like it. I got soaked in my tent again this year, but I'll be back for
another soaking next year.

I kinda miss the guy that used to yodel on the PA system in the early morning,
though (what happened to that?), and the the guy that used to fire up his AT6
the second the airport opened in the morning. I didn't hear either of those this
year.

Remove SHIRT to reply directly.

Dave

  #19  
Old August 8th 03, 08:51 PM
Margy Natalie
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Dave Butler wrote:



I kinda miss the guy that used to yodel on the PA system in the early morning,
though (what happened to that?), and the the guy that used to fire up his AT6
the second the airport opened in the morning. I didn't hear either of those this
year.


You should have been camping in the show plane area. We heard him loud and clear.

Margy

  #20  
Old August 8th 03, 10:21 PM
Jay Honeck
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Lost your tent??? Wow! As in "...where did our tent go?"???

No, as in "Holy crap, how did my tent get lifted up onto my wing!?"

I came back from spending the day shopping to find it laying over the
starboard wing. One of the one-inch aluminum poles was actually bent over
the trailing edge of the wing. (Those wings are a lot tougher than they
look.)

The wind actually snapped off three plastic stakes, and threw the tent --
gear inside and all! -- about ten feet. We found our ground cloth three
rows down, wrapped around the nosegear of a Skyhawk...

I kinda miss the guy that used to yodel on the PA system in the early

morning,
though (what happened to that?)


???

We heard him everyday! And we were waaaay out by the new Hilton.

Maybe that mid-range "pilot's deafness" is creeping up on you, eh?

(I wouldn't have minded not hearing those first departures at 6:22 AM...
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"


 




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