- Moderator
- #61
Could my memory be playing tricks?
I seem to recall as a 'late teenager' going on a tour of the southwest and paying a visit to Lulsgate.
I had written to the flying school requesting permission to visit their hangar (number crunching was my interest in those days) and received a kind reply suggesting that I phone from the terminal when I arrived.
So, on the agreed date, I parked outside the terminal in the free car park - who paid for parking in those days - and on entering the terminal I, as requested, found a telephone and made my call. "Yes they said it's fine to come and visit but we're on the far side of the airfield, do you have a car? Having confirmed that i did I was told to drive around the side of the apron and follow the taxiway, hold short of the runway to check for landing traffic, and then proceed to cross to the flying school".
So, is my memory playing tricks or could this really have been permitted in the late 1960s?
I seem to recall as a 'late teenager' going on a tour of the southwest and paying a visit to Lulsgate.
I had written to the flying school requesting permission to visit their hangar (number crunching was my interest in those days) and received a kind reply suggesting that I phone from the terminal when I arrived.
So, on the agreed date, I parked outside the terminal in the free car park - who paid for parking in those days - and on entering the terminal I, as requested, found a telephone and made my call. "Yes they said it's fine to come and visit but we're on the far side of the airfield, do you have a car? Having confirmed that i did I was told to drive around the side of the apron and follow the taxiway, hold short of the runway to check for landing traffic, and then proceed to cross to the flying school".
So, is my memory playing tricks or could this really have been permitted in the late 1960s?