Mon Jan 21, 2013 1:34 am
Seen here around 1975 sporting a fresh red, white & blue paint job to celebrate the USA's upcoming bicentennial, for many years the drab, gray plane served as a unique "jungle gym" for adventurous kids with a yearning to climb something. After the plane was removed, it was relocated to the St. Pete air museum (which was basically an outdoor parking lot of old planes.) The museum, which was located by the St. Pete-Clearwater airport and the old 94th Aero Squadron restaurant, eventually fell into disrepair and closed. The aircraft were moved (dumped) in a field off of Hwy 17 south of Ft. Meade FL. Some have been moved to the MAPS Air Museum, Akron Ohio to be restored for museum display.
Mon Jan 21, 2013 9:08 am
Best meal ever was at "The Log" in Walldorf; don't think that was the real name, but called so because of large downed tree trunk in the front yard. Jägerschnitzel smothered with stewed tomatoes and baked under a layer of cheese. Great memories!M.P. wrote:Beech AT-11 on a playground at Walldorf, Germany, just about two miles south of the Rhein-Main Airbase at Frankfurt Airport.
Mon Jan 21, 2013 9:11 am
Thu Jan 24, 2013 3:48 pm
I believe you mean the restaurant „Zigeunereiche“. Today it is a coffee shop, no Jägerschnitzel anymore. The location is 50.012675,8.579224 and the AT-11 was only a few steps away at 50.012888,8.578137Ken wrote:Best meal ever was at "The Log" in Walldorf; don't think that was the real name, but called so because of large downed tree trunk in the front yard. Jägerschnitzel smothered with stewed tomatoes and baked under a layer of cheese. Great memories!M.P. wrote:Beech AT-11 on a playground at Walldorf, Germany, just about two miles south of the Rhein-Main Airbase at Frankfurt Airport.
Ken
Thu Jan 24, 2013 5:03 pm
Wildchild wrote:You definately wouldn't see that in America. It would be labeled a war relic and sunk off the coast of Tampa, only to be stolen a week later, like this Neptune that was in Lowery Park Zoo for awhile:Seen here around 1975 sporting a fresh red, white & blue paint job to celebrate the USA's upcoming bicentennial, for many years the drab, gray plane served as a unique "jungle gym" for adventurous kids with a yearning to climb something. After the plane was removed, it was relocated to the St. Pete air museum (which was basically an outdoor parking lot of old planes.) The museum, which was located by the St. Pete-Clearwater airport and the old 94th Aero Squadron restaurant, eventually fell into disrepair and closed. The aircraft were moved (dumped) in a field off of Hwy 17 south of Ft. Meade FL. Some have been moved to the MAPS Air Museum, Akron Ohio to be restored for museum display.
Here's a video of the plane before she was painted in the Bi-Centennial markings:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2R6jw8y ... _embedded#!
(:47-2:01)
Thu Jan 24, 2013 10:18 pm
JFS61 wrote:Wildchild wrote:You definately wouldn't see that in America. It would be labeled a war relic and sunk off the coast of Tampa, only to be stolen a week later, like this Neptune that was in Lowery Park Zoo for awhile:Seen here around 1975 sporting a fresh red, white & blue paint job to celebrate the USA's upcoming bicentennial, for many years the drab, gray plane served as a unique "jungle gym" for adventurous kids with a yearning to climb something. After the plane was removed, it was relocated to the St. Pete air museum (which was basically an outdoor parking lot of old planes.) The museum, which was located by the St. Pete-Clearwater airport and the old 94th Aero Squadron restaurant, eventually fell into disrepair and closed. The aircraft were moved (dumped) in a field off of Hwy 17 south of Ft. Meade FL. Some have been moved to the MAPS Air Museum, Akron Ohio to be restored for museum display.
Here's a video of the plane before she was painted in the Bi-Centennial markings:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2R6jw8y ... _embedded#!
(:47-2:01)
Just whatever did happen to that bird after it "disappeared"?