AOPA
Open House Is IFR
AIRCRAFT OWNERS AND PILOTS ASSOCIATION’S 14TH
ANNUAL FLY-IN AND OPEN HOUSE SHRUGS OFF WEATHER, HOSTS THOUSANDS
June 7 – More than 4,700 people turned out for the 14th annual AOPA
Fly-In and Open House on Saturday, June 5, despite weather that remained
IFR(instrument flight rules) virtually all day.
“The enthusiasm and the passion of general aviation pilots was never
more apparent than today,” said AOPA President Phil Boyer. “They just
refused to let the weather stop them from coming to Fly-In.”
An estimated 4,500 people arrived by car throughout the day, while
nearly 120 aircraft flew in Friday and Saturday. More than two-thirds of
the visiting aircraft arrived on Saturday in instrument conditions.
Once here, visitors crowded the big top tent behind AOPA headquarters,
sampling the wares at more than 100 vendor exhibits, and filled to
capacity eleven hours’ worth of seminars. Many of the vendors said
business was as brisk as it might have been on a good weather day.
Broad range of seminar topics draw big crowds
AOPA President Phil Boyer talked to a packed session about many of the
issues facing AOPA and its members such as reducing the
Baltimore-Washington air defense identification zone, Sport Pilot and
the prospect of a driver’s license medical, and AOPA's position on the
FAA’s Flight Service Station outsourcing study. He also showed members
new, greatly improved online instrument approach procedure charts that
will be available with the new charting cycle, and revealed that a
completely revamped Flight Training Web site(flighttraining.aopa.org)
would be available beginning next Friday.
The AOPA Air Safety Foundation hosted two sessions each of its popular
Single Pilot IFR and Maneuvering Flight seminars. Other seminars
included a session on aviation legal matters hosted by attorneys from
Yodice and Associates, AOPA'sindependent legal counsel; how to save your
life in an aviation accident; sessions on purchasing and on upgrading an
aircraft; and of course, Rod Machado’s immensely popular hangar flying
session, Laugh and Learn.
Despite weather, many still make time to visit the static display
By late afternoon, the rain had let up enough that visitors were able to
get out and take up-close looks at more than two dozen aircraft in the
static display area. The aircraft ranged from the two-seat Diamond
Eclipse up to a Cessna CitationJet. The star of the show, though, was
the AOPA Win-A-Twin Sweepstakes grand prize, a better-than-new 1965
Piper Twin Comanche. It sports new custom paint scheme and brand new
panel. Now that Fly-In is over, the Win-A-Twin Twin Comanche heads off
to have the interior redone. Anyone who joins or renews membership in
AOPA during 2004 is automatically entered in the sweepstakes. Complete
rules, eligibility requirements, and alternate methods of entry are
available online at aopa.org/sweeps/rules.html/.
It’s all about the members
“The whole reason for holding our Fly-In and Open House is to get to
meet our members face-to-face, and hear what’s on their minds,” said
Boyer. “In fact, I had the opportunity to present a longtime member, Ike
Kibbe, with his 50-year membership pin. He joined in 1947. And the best
part was, he was here with his grandson, who’s also a pilot and an AOPA
member.”
Now AOPA begins looking ahead to AOPA Expo 2004. Expo returns to the
West Coast this year, October 21-23 in Long Beach, Calif. Registration
begins June 9.
The more-than-400,000-member Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association has
been representing the interests of general aviation pilots since 1939.
General aviation includes all flying except the scheduled airlines and
the military. Nearly two-thirds of all U.S. pilots, and three-quarters
of the GA pilots, are AOPA members.
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