The Pride of Cherry Grove
With little more than Bernard Pietenpol's plans, anybody could build an airplane.
- By Marshall Lumsden
- Air & Space magazine, May 2010
(Page 5 of 6)
The Pietenpol, with its short range and slow speed, is not a comfortable airplane for long-distance flights. In 1993, though, M.T. “Sparky” Sparks and his stepson Scott Liefeld stuffed their gear into the front cockpits of two Air Campers and took off from Gillespie Field in San Diego, California, for Brodhead. It was a 15-day journey, during which they stopped for fuel 46 times.
More people drive to Brodhead than fly. The land around the airfield is open to campers, and the scene has the feel of a country fair. There is Doc Mosher and wife Dee at the table, ready to sign you in and give you a handout outlining the day’s forums, which are hosted by Pietenpol experts. Mosher and his wife also remind you to get tickets for Saturday night’s traditional grilled pork chop dinner. Soft drinks from the cooler are 75 cents, paid for on the honor system. People mill around the parked airplanes, talk to the owners, and admire the exquisite handiwork that can go into a Pietenpol.
Hang around the airplanes long enough and somebody will offer to take you for a ride. Pete Smith, from Lake City, Michigan, asked me if I wanted to go, and I accepted immediately. Getting into the front cockpit isn’t easy: You have to squirm between the struts and wires without whacking your head. It takes precise instructions from the pilot every step of the way.
After a quick liftoff and gentle climbout, we level off at 500 to 600 feet and cruise above farmland at a leisurely 75 mph. The Piet feels stable and predictable. The visibility is spectacular, especially since you can look over the side of the fuselage almost straight down. I observe things that I never seem to notice while flying in other airplanes: birds, people and cars on the ground, and swirling patterns made by breeze-swept corn tassels.
When I was a kid, I sometimes got invited to go for a ride in a Ford roadster with the top down. My flight in the Piet reminds me of those rides—that feeling of gleeful release.
Reminders of Pietenpol History are plentiful. You can still find people who knew and worked with Bernard Pietenpol, and some of the airplanes he built still exist. His earliest surviving Air Camper, N12937, first flew on April 20, 1933. It survived five owners, two serious crashes, several restorations, and several thousand flying hours. Today it is displayed at the EAA museum.
Don Pietenpol lived the history. As far as he can remember, airplanes were always around. When he was three, he took his first ride in an Air Camper, which had no seatbelts. “My dad took the belt off his pants and strapped me in the front cockpit,” he recalls. Bernard taught him to fly when he was nine, and he got his pilot’s license at 16. Don was a U.S. Air Force pilot before working as an engineer at IBM in nearby Rochester, Minnesota, where he still lives.
Bill Knight, who lives in Brodhead, owns the last Air Camper Pietenpol ever built. It was finished in 1969. Still flyable, it is powered by a Chevy Corvair engine. When Pietenpol’s grandson put it up for sale, Knight bought it because, he says, he didn’t want it to go to a museum. “I thought it should be available where people could see how Bernie himself built an airplane,” says Knight, who frequently shows off his Air Camper at vintage-airplane fly-ins around the country.
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Comments (6)
I have a Pietenpol Air Camper (CF-AUN) which I built and have been flying since 1970. The article describes rather well the affection Pietenpol builders and owners have for this little airplane. I consider building and flying mine to be one of the most satisfying things I have ever done. It has only a little over 800 hours on it because our long cold Alberta, Canada winters discourage open cockpit flying for perhaps five months per year. All 800(+) were quality hours, though.
In 1982, my friend (also a Pietenpol builder)and I visited BHP at Cherry Grove on our way home from Oshkosh by car. We never forgot that visit and often talked about it. We found Mr. Pietenpol to be a very gracious man and left feeling we had somehow known him for a very long time.
Posted by Graham Hansen on March 18,2010 | 12:26 AM
I want to thank Marshall Lumsden for his article on the Pietenpol (“The Pride of Cherry Grove”). He does a great job of explaining not only the history of this wonderful home-built aircraft, but more importantly, he aptly captures the “Piet Building Experience”. Shortly after retiring as a fighter pilot several years ago, I started building a Pietenpol and have enjoyed the process as much as I know I will flying “Low and Slow”, vice at the speed of sound. People often ask “how much longer until you are done?” The standard aircraft builder’s answer is: “I’m 90% complete and I have 90% to go”. However, my answer is usually more thoughtful and considerate, offering insights into the whole experience; “I wish it would never end, and here’s why...” Honestly, the most frustrating activity involved in building a Piet (I say this tongue and cheek), is finding words to adequately answer the question most often asked by onlookers, friends and family; simply, “Now, why are you building a P-p-p-Piet-N-what”? Mr. Lumsden has provided us with a marvelous article with which to tackle this problem, and I will certainly point to his article often. Kindred spirits will quickly understand and gather a better appreciation, and may even get the bug. Assuredly, skeptics will still remain as they did in Bernard Pietenpol’s time…”These flying machines are just a fad and will never catch on…”
Thank you Mr. Pietenpol, for your adventurous spirit, and your fine airplane.
Thank you Mr. Lumsden, for your service in WWII, and for your terrific article.
Steve Chase
Owings, MD
chase143@aol.com
Posted by Steve Chase on March 19,2010 | 10:58 AM
A very nice and complete article. I've been working on a Pietenpol since 1968 and am finally building a shop large enough to put all the pieces I have constructed together. It has been frustratingly slow but the Piet lends itself to building around jobs, building houses, family demands etc. and, in my case, a desire to keep costs down since my wife doesn't share my passion for airplanes and so I can't justify using much family funds for materials.
Posted by Mac Zirges on March 19,2010 | 01:04 AM
Yes, as mentioned above, we flew the two pietenpols from San Diego to Broadhead, Wi. then on to Eastern Ky. Tenn.,Ark.,Texas, NM., Az.,and Ca. Slept under the wings in our pup tents. Low and slow, the way to go. Sparky Sparks
Posted by Sparky Sparks on March 21,2010 | 12:13 PM
Thank you for such a well written and researched article. Typically there are technical errors that are easily spotted by the subject patticipants but yours was a welcome exception.
My Air Camper took 8 years and cost $8,000 to build. What a great return on such a modest investment! I have pretty much covered all the midwestern states and have made a lot of friends and enlightened many folks as I have criss-crossed the heartland. As a retired military (U.S. Coast Guard) and airline (Comair) pilot, I couldn't have chosen a better or more relaxing relaxing way to fly into retirement.
Whether I land at an airport or a farm field, I am always welcomed and have a hard time leaving quickly because of the questions from spectators that seem to materialize. The Air Camper is a crowd magnet no matter what other aircraft happens to be on the ramp with it.
We Pietenpol builder/flyers consider ourselves a brotherhood and your words have reflected much of that. Thanks again!
Larry Williams N899LW
Posted by Larry Williams on April 23,2010 | 02:51 PM
I enjoyed the article very much. I always enjoy reading Pietenpol History as in my younger years when we lived in Cherry Grove I wasn't to impressed with what was going on as I thought that if this was happening in little Cherry Grove it must be a commonplace occurance in other areas. When I was 2 years old my Dad (Orrin Hoopman) would set me in his lap and take me for rides in his plane, the Original Sky Scout. Unfortunatley I don't remember these flights. I must have enjoyed it or it would have happened only once. I am married to John Finke and his Uncle was Don Finke, who flew to Wold Chamberlain to prove that Airplanes could fly with car engines.
Bernis Hoopman Finke
Posted by Bernis Hoopman Finke on October 3,2011 | 02:58 PM