CARAVAN HISTORY
It was early 1998 when Akmal Khan innocently posted a note on the Mooney Mailing List asking if anyone else going to Oshkosh for the EAA convention wanted to explore the possibility of camping together. (Seehttp://lists.kjsl.com/mailman/listinfo/mooney for a link to the lists.) Jonathan Paul accepted the challenge and organized anad hoc group of Mooney owners to make the trip together. Madison was chosen as the marshaling site for the caravan due to its proximity to Oshkosh, its Class C airspace, and the South Ramp, location of a defunct FBO that offered copious parking for transient planes. Forty-one planes descended on an unsuspecting Madison in 1998 for the first edition of a new tradition. A special Letter of Agreement was negotiated with the FAA to allow for a group arrival, and arrangements were made with the EAA ground crews for handling. Things went so well that it was decided to repeat the exercise – again, and again, and again. The year 2000 was the high water mark for participation, with ninety-seven planes, after which the exhausted organizers decided to scale back the operation to maximize the fun while minimizing organizational hassles.
Over the years the basic formula of the caravan has remained the same – a cell formation of planes with one clearance from ATC, arriving in a “sterilized” airspace at Oshkosh where other traffic is excluded during the group's arrival. Caravan participants who have flown the Fisk arrival at other times report that the caravan arrival is much less stressful. The caravan formula now includes groups of six airplanes within the cell formation, and a one and one-half hour all hands briefing, followed by a planeside briefing for each group. Activities proceed in a calm, orderly fashion, building gradually up to the half-hour flight, which has become the most anticipated flight of the year for many caravan participants.
Another caravan tradition is the annual Mooney Caravan Barbecue. What started in 1998 as a community cook-in on camp stoves has evolved to a fabulous feed resulting from the efforts of a well-oiled machine led by John Bartholomew which serves a wonderful repast that allows caravan participants and other Mooney lovers to share Wisconsin's famous Gemütlichkeit. Besides the increased sophistication in the mechanics of staging the barbecue, another big change has been the enthusiastic participation and support of the Mooney factory. Where the caravan was initially ignored by a prior (and much less PR aware) administration, the present Mooney Airplane Company wholeheartedly supports the efforts of the caravan, from sending a factory new plane to participate to passing out freebies at the barbecue (shrewdly creating numerous walking billboards on the grounds of AirVenture).