Wednesday humour
Wednesday humour
Some Wednesday flying humour:
- Attachments
-
- Missed approach?
- vlieg_861.jpg (96.81 KiB) Viewed 605 times
Keep grassroot aviation alive!
Boy, does this make things a lot easier for me over where I spend a lot of my time!
viewtopic.php?t=4682
Henni
viewtopic.php?t=4682
Henni
Keep grassroot aviation alive!
Friday Humor
Hi all,
Very talkative right now (being close to a hundred posts might just have to do something with it...)
Anyway, I've read the following in a flying magazine a long time ago:
The instructor sends the pupe for his first cross country flight in the school's Tigermoth. For some reason, the pupe gets lots and makes an precautionary landing in a field just before running out of fuel.
He radios the instructor who leaves in the school's other Tigermoth to help the pupe in distress.
When the instructor reaches the student, he is amazed to find the small fenced in field that the pupe landed in. After a few fly pasts, he decides that, if his student can put it down there, then so can he.
On short finals, he realized immediately that it was a huge mistake & just before hitting the opposite fence, he made a ground loop to avoid it, scraping the one wingtip in the process.
He asked the pupe: "How the $@#^& did you land here?" on which the student replied: "I did not sir, I landed in the adjasent field, but on the very last bounce ended up in this field.
Henni
Very talkative right now (being close to a hundred posts might just have to do something with it...)
Anyway, I've read the following in a flying magazine a long time ago:
The instructor sends the pupe for his first cross country flight in the school's Tigermoth. For some reason, the pupe gets lots and makes an precautionary landing in a field just before running out of fuel.
He radios the instructor who leaves in the school's other Tigermoth to help the pupe in distress.
When the instructor reaches the student, he is amazed to find the small fenced in field that the pupe landed in. After a few fly pasts, he decides that, if his student can put it down there, then so can he.
On short finals, he realized immediately that it was a huge mistake & just before hitting the opposite fence, he made a ground loop to avoid it, scraping the one wingtip in the process.
He asked the pupe: "How the $@#^& did you land here?" on which the student replied: "I did not sir, I landed in the adjasent field, but on the very last bounce ended up in this field.
Henni
Keep grassroot aviation alive!
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests