

...where
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January 13, 2004 At 84, Still
Soaring By JAMES HANNAH The
Associated Press NEW CARLISLE, Ohio — As cold
winds bump and jostle the small plane, the pilot wrestles the aircraft into
landing position and tiptoes it down on a short strip of grass runway. The single-engine Cherokee 140
begins to veer left and is deftly righted, pulling up short of the bales of
hay that frame a nursery at the end of the landing strip at Andy Barnhart
Memorial Airport. The four-seater
is pushed into a hangar, and out climbs Violet "Vi" Blowers, a
silver-haired 4-foot-10 fireplug, wearing a tan pantsuit, amber-tinted
clip-on sunglasses and white tennis shoes. She is back from lunch in
Bluffton, a 66-mile hop she makes nearly every Monday. At 84, she is the most active
pilot at Andy Barnhart, logging 4,000 hours on the Cherokee she has owned
since 1972. Her monthly fuel bill alone averages $300. To say Blowers loves to fly only
hints at a passion she has had for 36 years. She is one of only 12 women in
the United Flying Octogenarians, a 420-member club for Blowers cares for her ivory-colored Cherokee like a teenage boy
with his first car. She sets it on the grass runway instead of the concrete
strip to save wear and tear on the tires. She keeps the aluminum sparkling,
drawing good-natured chortles from fellow pilots. "They tease me," she
said. "Every time I get a bug on there I’m washing it off." Blowers caught the flying fever
in the 1960s when a friend let her steer his plane during a flight from Since then, the sky has been Blowers’
little getaway. "I think this keeps her
young," said Paul Carter, a 62-year-old pilot who also owns a hangar at
the airport. The Federal Aviation
Administration sets no maximum age for pilots, but every two years, those 40
and older must obtain medical certificates from doctors selected by the FAA.
They must pass vision and hearing tests, and can be disqualified for certain
conditions, including heart problems and epilepsy. In 2003, 3,111 people age 80 and
older held active-pilot medical certificates in the Ninety-six-year-old Nathan
Morris, of Stevensville, Md., began flying when he was 30, inspired by the
feats of Charles Lindbergh. He has crossed the A retired electrical engineer, he
still pilots his 1973 Cessna long distances, to "They say I don’t look my
age," he said. "I’m fit as a fiddle. I just tire a little
easier." A petite woman with a boundless
spirit, Blowers has been in 55 air races and has won more than 20 trophies. Most of Blowers’ trips — to "She’s just an unbelievable
person," said her 63-year-old nephew, Jeffrey Jenkins. "She’s very
energetic, adventuresome. She’s done so many things no one in the rest of the
family has done." The former Violet Weller was the
youngest of four children who grew up on a family farm near East Fultonham in southeast During World War II, she moved
to She made prototype uniforms for
the Air Force and flight uniforms for the Thunderbirds, the aerobatic F-16
pilots. She later made flight jackets for former presidents Richard Nixon,
Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. "She still hasn’t
completely retired. She told me she was making a uniform for a general the
other day," said friend Dottie Anderson, of Bluffton. "And she
makes all of her own clothes. They’re just gorgeous." But sewing still takes second
place to the air up there. "It’s a thrill every time I
go up," Blowers said. Her time in the skies has not
come without a few scares. Two years ago she was flying to "My instruments were
spinning," Blowers said. She pressed on for fear there wouldn’t
be a replacement pump at a nearby airport. "I just had to ignore
it," she said evenly. Once in the late 1970s, her
engine shut down as she was flying home from "I was all right until I
got there, and then I just shook all over," Blowers recalled. She has also been shaken by
personal tragedy. Emmitt, her high school
sweetheart, died in 1982 after a battle with cancer. The couple had no
children. Her second husband, Les Stamm, died four
years later after suffering a stroke. She never remarried, yet somehow
that youthful enthusiasm is intact — quite possibly harnessed from the power
of her fire-engine red, five-speed BMW roadster. Clearly, she has no plans to
fold up her wings. "When the time comes,"
she said, "I think I’ll know." |
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