Alright, that's a corny title for
a blog post about the newest book in this series of short stories about
aviation, but what can I say? This Flight book series is such a fun
project with lots of interesting anecdotes about some great people – and readers are
loving it!
Let me introduce you to a few of
the folks you’ll read about in Volume 2 of Flight...
Anglican Bishop of Saskatoon Rt. Rev. Rodney
Andrews worked in both ministry and aviation for most of his career across
Canada. His list of flying experiences includes working as
a part-time instructor with the Lethbridge Flying Club while ministering with
the Blood First Nations in southern Alberta, then working with Time Air and Air
Canada. He then moved to Quebec for a few years, combining parish work with
hospital chaplaincy east of Montreal. From 1988 to 1991, he was in Ottawa
working as a part-time chaplain with HMCS Carleton Navy reserve while on a
staff with three other clergy at a church in Nepean and working as a full-time
Transport Canada inspector. Rod’s had many unique experiences worthy of
reporting in a book such as this, including fun connections through his friends
in Flying Farmers of Alberta.

Northern Saskatchewan pilot Doug Chisholm sent me this photo of himself (above right) with his
pilot friend Harold Fast in February, while I was putting together the stories
for Volume 2. It turns out that Doug and Harold both brought the same
book with them to read on their January 2020 trip to Mexico – Volume 1
of Flight: Stories of Canadian Aviation, by Deana J. Driver (that's me)
and Contributors. How great is that? Doug told me that he and Harold left
Saskatoon on a Wednesday and arrived in Loreto, Mexico on a Sunday in Harold’s
Cessna 182RG, “a great cross-country aircraft. Quite a spectacular flight in
many ways; we saw lots of interesting terrain. I certainly enjoyed your book,
which I received from Will Chabun (a retired journalist who has also contributed to the Flight series) when I spoke at the Regina Chapter of the
Canadian Aviation Historical Society,” Doug wrote. Doug has owned his Cessna 180
floatplane for 40 years and has recorded aerial
photographs of 4,000 lakes and other geographic features that the province of
Saskatchewan has named in memory of servicemen who lost their lives during the
Second World War. On behalf of families, Doug has placed bronze memorial
plaques on the shores of 300 Saskatchewan lakes honouring the servicemen for
whom those sites were named, and he has spent thousands of hours uncovering
more information and recording it for archival purposes. The story of Doug's memorial efforts is a must-read in Volume
2.

Speaking of the Canadian Aviation Historical
Society, I met Gary M. Williams, who is the president of the Regina branch
and also the Society's national president, when I spoke to the Regina group in
December 2019. In Volume 2 of Flight, you'll read about how Gary travelled to Sweden in 2014 to meet the Swedish woman who saved his bomber-pilot father after
his plane crashed in 1942 during the Second World War. I’m sure you’ll enjoy “Shot
Down in Sweden” and “The Girl Who Saved My Father”.

Another one of the 14 stories I wrote for Volume 2
of Flight: Stories of Canadian Aviation is about civilian pilot
Gerd Wengler, who made a record-breaking flight from Canada’s southernmost
point of Pelee Island, Ontario to its northernmost point at CFS Alert. “The year 2009 was the 100th anniversary of powered
flight in Canada – Alexander Graham Bell flew the Silver Dart in Nova Scotia in
February 1909,” said Gerd. “The Royal Canadian Air Force had all kinds of
programs and special things happening in 2009 to celebrate 100 years of powered
flight in Canada, so I found this general in Ottawa and I told him my idea as
part of the Air Force celebration to fly across Canada from Pelee Island in
Lake Erie to Alert. That interested him and I got permission two years later.
The DND told us they had never given anyone a permit. That’s why I believe
nobody else had done it. The only condition was that I was not allowed to tell
anyone until after the flight.”
And then there are stories about Manitoba bush
pilot Keith Olson, who dealt with falling aircraft parts, and aircraft mechanic
Don Currie, who told of struggling to get French President Mitterrand’s Concorde off
the ground in Regina in 1987. You’ll also read about Regina-born pilot Ralph Tweten,
who had dozens of adventures while flying in northern Saskatchewan,
southern Alberta, the Arctic, and Iran.
Then there are 23 more stories written by 12 other Canadian
writers: Will Chabun, a retired newspaperman and aviation historian mentioned above (who wrote stories
about newspaperman Foster Barnsley, aviation inspector Howard Ingram, and Air
Canada passenger agents Brian Zawacki and Dave Scott); Peter Foster, an
aviation enthusiast; Paul W. Greening, an aviation insurance investigator;
Alvin Irlbeck, a retired farmer and pilot; Don Macpherson, a flying instructor
and retired teacher; Malcolm McLeod, a balloon pilot and former journalist;
Harry Meeds, a Saskatchewan pioneer of flight; Vincent Murphy-Dodds, a writer
and humorist; Ron Sather, a former pilot; Ron Stansfield, an aviation
enthusiast and retired Canadian diplomat; Walter D. Williams, an unofficial air
ambulance pilot; and Bill Wunsch, a private pilot.
Volume 2
of Flight: Stories of Canadian Aviation shares loads of fascinating true stories of early flight schools, northern
rescues, animal obstacles, hijackings, errant passengers, landings on unique
landscapes, humorous military surprises, and more.
The two volumes of the Flight series
are available from www.driverworks.ca, Saskatchewan Aviation Museum gift shop
in Saskatoon SK, McNally Robinson Booksellers in Saskatoon SK, Penny University
Bookstore in Regina SK, Audrey’s Books in Edmonton AB, Canadian Aviator
Magazine, Chapters, Indigo, Coles, SaskBooks, Amazon, and as e-books.