Flight in to Oshkosh
As I mentioned, the materials are very comprehensive and do a great job of preparing you for the experience. However, nothing is left to chance. There is a mandatory briefing two hours before departure where all of the details are covered, all questions are answered, and the group again hears that the focus of the flight is a safe, group arrival at Oshkosh so we can all camp together. There is also a follow on safety briefing by the planes where each group lead makes sure that his flight of six is properly prepared, and any remaining questions are answered. There are no “medals” issued for tight formation flying, and in fact most of us have never had any formation flying experience. The groups are organized to ensure that pilots of varying skill levels in very different aircraft are comfortable together. I think it is safe to say that Mooney Caravan XII benefitted enormously from the continuous learning and improvement of prior caravan experiences. In fact, the goal this year was to keep the maximum number of planes at 48 (we still had some openings!) so that the group size was safe and manageable. I personally think that the level of safety was high, and there is room to expand the group size if more of us were to attend, but I leave those tough calls to the characters who have done this many times.
Our flight started with the most amazing taxi line of 37 Mooneys lined up to take the active runway out of Madison. All aircraft in fact were on the runway in our position and hold spot as the Mooney Lead, Dave Piehler took the take-off clearance from Madison tower. A regional jet had just landed in front of our flight and was taxiing back, but stopped to watch the takeoff sequence. I was positioned in Echo #6 (roughly position #30) so had a spectacular view of each aircraft launching four seconds in trail of the plane that launched immediately in front. With ten second gaps between the flights of six, there was a very reasonable margin of safety between groups as the inevitable speed corrections of “loose formation” flying snaked to the back of the group.
For those of us who have not had the experience, there is something special about the landing sequence when you can see 8 – 10 aircraft in front of you on short final. Smooth flying, quick taxiing, and proper advance briefing took most of the drama out of this experience and we were quickly on our way for a long taxi through the grass to our Mooney neighborhood of tents.