Airports of Call
The choicest sites for airplane watching.
- By Russell Munson
- Air & Space magazine, September 2001
I FEEL AT HOME WHEREVER AIRPLANES ARE. When I travel, either in my own airplane or on an airliner, I take a look around the airports at my destination. At major terminals, of course, you’re restricted, though you can usually find a good vantage point for watching the activity on the runways. But at smaller ones, if you’re not a nuisance, you can quietly explore, looking through open hangar doors, meeting people and their airplanes, and watching them fly. Add a day onto your next trip to seek out a small airport. You’ll almost surely see something you’ve never seen before. Let me introduce you to a few places I’ve visited recently.
Several years ago on a long cross-country flight in my Piper Super Cub, I saw a curious sight southwest of Spokane, Washington. It was one of those super-clear days that makes you keep checking the chart in disbelief because you can see so much farther than usual. Ahead, two very large airplanes were doing touch-and-go landings on a giant runway in the middle of nowhere. I grabbed my sectional chart. This was either a mirage or Grant County International Airport at Moses Lake, a small town in southeast central Washington that is for some reason served by an airport with a 13,503-foot runway. Closer in, I could see they were Boeing 747s going round and round in a tight pattern.
“Grant County tower, Super Cub 7789P.”
“Cub 89P, Grant County.”
“89P is 15 to the east at 2,500. We’d appreciate traffic advisories, and, ah, what are those 747s doing?”
“They belong to Japan Air Lines. JAL trains here.”
I learned that Grant County International was formerly a Strategic Air Command base—Larson Air Force Base—and B-52s flew from that long runway. In fact, Boeing delivered all the B-52s built in Washington to the Air Force at Moses Lake. But as the missile age dawned, some SAC bases closed. The little town was left with a magnificent but vacant airport. For JAL, however, Moses Lake was the perfect place for its Heavy Jet Aircrew Training Center. The airline has been in town now for 34 years and currently operates a 747-200 and 747-400.
I stop in Moses Lake whenever I’m out that way. I’ve watched those graceful hippos whistling down the chute in the rain, at night, and at dawn, big tires screeching against asphalt in billowing clouds of rubber smoke. I’ve seen the rudder kick way over as the instructor yanks back a thrust lever to simulate an engine failure just as the airplane is poised on its hind feet for takeoff. I can imagine the student stretching his leg hard against the rudder pedal, trying to keep his aircraft straight. Sometimes, both 747s will use opposite ends of the same runway to save time in an alternating ballet of taking off straight out, wracking over into a teardrop turn, and coming on around to land in the reverse direction.





Comments (2)
I served in the Royal Canadian Air Force from 1950 to 1985, for the first fifteen years flying as a Navigator. I began with the Canadian variant of the DC-4, known in Jane's All the World Aircraft as the North Star. Next was a two-year tour in NATO Europe, based in Paris, flying one dear old
DC-3, which had been outfitted as a VIP ship to serve as the air taxi for the General Commanding the Canadian Air Division in Europe. A check of the logs of this aircraft revealed that it had once been employed flying "The Hump" in Burma during the Second World War.
This wonderful old aircraft, the DC3 has had a myriad of roles over the many decades, and it is a veritable treat to learn that some dedicated souls such as Paul Kupke (I wonder if he is a distant relative ?)still manage to keep it flying by dint of sheer determination and hard work, and making a living in the bargain.
Posted by Jim Kupkee on April 14,2009 | 05:35 PM
A wonderful article that brought back many memories.
I learned to fly in 19454 at an airport that is nolonger there, Tricity, near San Bernardino, CA., owned by Joe and Pinky Briar. Pinky flew Bonanxas on charter in and out of LAX (Los angeles) so many times she had her own approved approaches.
I later lived on and flew out of Whiteman Airport in the San Fernando Valley, where Petere Garrison kept his homebuilt "Melmoth" that he flew to England and to Japan.
I took my multi engine check ride out of Santa Paula Airport, with an FAA Examiner that was the retired head of the FAA at LAX. At Santa Paula he "rebuilt" a Navy Biplane so thoroughly that there was only one piece of the original frame tubing in the tail section, which later was replaced because it worried him.
Santa Paula was, and still is, home to many older airplanes, and a wonderful place to wander among the hangers on a weekend. It used to be a favorite place to have a fly-in breakfast on the weekend. Sometimes it was so crowded with visitors that there was hardly room for either my Smith Miniplane or my Pitts S1D.
(Yes, you can edit this any way you want if you decide to use it. I still want to fly, can feel it sometimes, even if the FAA says my 84 year old body with a pacemaker can't replace my paper license with the new platic kind. R McC )
Posted by Russell W. McCrackin on December 8,2010 | 03:36 PM