The Mike Wildeman Story – Part 1

The Mike Wildeman Story – Part 1

Mike Wildman is an amputee pilot who has had a fascinating career in aviation. This tale is about his time in the Royal Air Force flying the C130 Hercules in some very challenging theatres. His story will both amaze and inspire, particularly in the later parts when we will cover his work as the leader of the world’s only fully aerobatic amputee formation team… TeamPhoenixAir.com

 

Mike, learning to fly

 

Mike during his RAF basic flying training

 

 

Mike was posted to fly the C130 Hercules

 

Low flying over the desert

 

Mike, the captain of a Belgium Air Force C130 during his exchange tour

 

The EPTS Andover that Mike flew

 

The Boscome Down Comet 4 named Canopus that Mike flew to the North Pole

 

The day at RIAT when a Mig 29 crashed onto Mike’s aircraft nearly killing him and the others who were watching the show from the top of the fuselage!

 

Contact details for Mike and Team Phoenix, the world’s only disabled aerobatic formation team

 

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Mike Freer, RuthAS and the RAF.

Where it All Began

Where it All Began

The Old Pilot ventures back to the little airport where his career in aviation began nearly half a century previously, meets the young lady now doing his old job and recalls some adventures from his early days.

 

Many thanks to Nev of Plane Talking UK for providing the audio visual equipment

 

Grace talks about Synergy Flight Training

 

The Old Pilot does his thing!

 

 

Thanks to those who came

The Millionaire’s Mob

The Millionaire’s Mob

White’s is the oldest and most exclusive Gentleman’s club in London its members have included more Earls, Dukes, Lords, Barrons, Princes, Knights, Viscounts. Marquesses, heads of industry and notable politicians than you could shake a stick at. The name we’re interested in, though, is that of Lord Edward Grosvenor, the youngest son of the 1st Duke of Westminster. It was in White’s that Grosvenor had the idea to form an RAF Squadron of wealthy aristocratic young aviators all of whom were already amateur pilots and members of the club… this is the story of that Squadron.

 

Hot Chocolate, the drink that started it all

 

Chocolate and Coffee Houses were known for anarchy, licentiousness, gambling, hobnobbing, and politicking.

 

White’s, the oldest and most exclusive Gentleman’s club in London

 

The French Foreign Legion

 

The Gordon Bennett Balloon Race trophy

 

An officer and a gentleman

 

The Avro 504

 

No 601 Squadron the County of London

 

Swapping cockpits

 

Billy Fisk III driving the 1932 US Olympic bobsled team

 

The Hawker Hurricane

 

Canadian Sir John William Maxwell Aitken

 

The Millionaire’s Hurricanes over England

 

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to the Library of Congress, Afro Bighair, Anthony O’Neil, the National Archives, Deutsche Fotothek and the RAF.

The Sensory Pilot

The Sensory Pilot

The world of a pilot is different to any other. They see things from a different perspective and view the world from places that even the mightiest birds cannot reach. All their faculties of sight, smell, taste, touch and hearing experience sensations unique to their position whether they are manoeuvring a mighty airliner or sliding through the air on sheets of silk in a slippery sailplane. When they get a chance, even the most professional and conscientious pilots will take a moment to marvel at their world. These are treasured moments that they will lock in their hearts and only bring out in quiet moments of contemplation, perhaps when they look back and realise what a life of wonder they have led.

The gear

 

The brain

 

Cordite

 

Passengers

 

Switches

 

Gloves

 

Goon suit

Size

 

Saraha

 

Ice rivers

 

Ice bergs

 

Streets of cumuli

 

Skyscrapers

 

Noctilucent

 

Glory

 

Trails

 

Moon

 

Sunset

 

Steph

 

Rick

 

Atlantic

 

Touchdown

Airtists

Airtists

We all have our favourite flying movies, whether it’s a black and white classic with biplanes wheeling around the sky flown by actual World War One flying aces, comedy cult movies from which we can quote our favourite lines (Shirley you don’t mean that) or modern thrillers which employ state of the art computer generated imagery. This is a story of a much loved actor who didn’t just act in an aircraft crash, he became an unwilling participant.

 

Favourite movies

 

Ancestor William Bradford

 

Army swimming training

 

Going AWOL, a black mark for the squad

 

The Douglas AD-1Q Skyraider

 

A ditched Skyraider

 

A single seat dingy

 

The coast off Point Reyes

 

The RCA station that took him in

 

Clint Eastwood

 

 

Images under Creative Commons licence with thanks to Glasshouse, coolvalley, Impawards, MGM, the US Army, US Navy, the Produzioni Europee Associati and the NPS GOV.