What to do for the 1,000th blog posting, other than amazement I’ve kept doing it, and a few people keep
reading it? Instead of some epic rant, decided to do something for my late Dad.
When I returned from the Army, the
dormant flying bug became full blown. With some bucks in the bank, decided it
was now or never. Snagged a job with a meteorology company that had a contract
to study snowfall patterns. Great job.
We worked when it was storming and were off when the weather was nice. My
coworkers went skiing. I went flying.
My Dad always had the flying bug and used
me as an excuse to start lessons. We went in on a 1939 Piper J-4, somewhere
around 75 hp, operating off a 7,000 AGL runway. As my father was known to say,
“You by God learned what flying was all about”. The J-4 is a forgiving airplane
at reasonable altitudes but hasn’t much margin for error at the altitude we
operated.
We put many hours on that bird. Later,
after earning his Private ticket, Dad bought a Cessna 182. He had become
involved in Real Estate and that airplane helped put together several ranch
sales in the region. He always said the ranch deals payed for the plane.
My Dad was one hell of a stick but was
careless. He didn’t appreciate his son pointing out his lapses. Since he had
such a domineering personality, I was about the only person who would speak up.
He intimidated flight instructors. While he never bent one, I know he scared
himself a few times.
We had a strained relationship all the
years. He and my mother divorced after 33 years. Family joke. My sister and I
tell people we are the result of a mixed marriage. My Dad was cows, my Mom
sheep. My sister adds their marriage was a range war.
Around age 60, my Dad started to reinvent
himself, for lack of a better description. He started examining his beliefs and
ways of dealing with things. I’ve always admired that. He died in his sleep
when he was 64, probably from complications of undiagnosed sleep apnea.
Two things I regret about his death.
First, my sons never got to know him as they grew up. He was terrific with
kids, just not his own. Second, we were starting to patch up our differences
and we probably would have had a much better relationship. It was hard as I
inherited his temper and my mother’s stubbornness, not to mention she was often
a bitch on steroids, and I am sometimes my mother’s son.
I do have to cut my parents some slack.
They grew up in the Great Depression in a Grapes of Wrath environment. Their
drive to succeed was undoubtedly fueled by what my parents described as, “The
belly flapping principal”.
In summary, if you have made it this far,
thank you for reading this.
10 comments:
Congrats! Milestones are good. Celebrating them with aircraft stories? Even better!
Sorry there wasn't a,"There I was" airplane story. Maybe in a future blog.
Oh great milestone, there WSF. Loved the thoughts on your dad. Mine died young also and Bug never knew him. Describing a marriage as a range war did give me a little chuckle and a little sad face at the same time. I guess I never thought of you as a bitch on steroids. And keep on blogging on. Love your posts but most of all...kisses and hugs to you!
1000 posts! That's a big one.
I should go look at my count sometime, I've completely lost track.
It's good that you started mending your fences with your dad (catch the range-type reference there?) I don't think my relationship with my dad will ever be fixed.
Gender confusion. Many who have known me over the years would agree with, "Bastard on Steroids".
Mended many miles of fence for my dad, the real kind with barb wire. The others we were making a start.
Congrats on the 1K.
re: your Dad - IMO it's not uncommon for there to be some tension between father and son. Kind of like the herd bull dealing with young challengers. Anyway...
"I inherited his temper and my mother’s stubbornness"
The best of both. :-)
Then I married a Norwegian.
Yep, our parents had a 'different' perspective on life. At least you got to start the reconciliation... And learned to fly!
Started piddling around with flying in 1961 but didn't get serious until 1966. I was never estranged from my father but we had a strained relationship. Around 1969 I collected a business debt from one of his closest friends by bending his friend over a dozer blade and giving him three hours to produce a cashiers check or be crippled. That didn't go over well. I did get the check.
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