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An Airplane of Our Own

A Cessna 195 captures this pilot's heart, for now.

[Credit: Leonardo Correa Luna]
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • After a five-year hiatus from aviation while sailing, the author and his wife are returning to general aviation, building a home on an airstrip, and are determined to acquire an airplane.
  • The author's long-standing dream aircraft is the Cessna 195, admired for its art-deco charm, radial engine, and utility.
  • Recent engagement with the International Cessna 195 Club community and a more favorable used aircraft market have made them realize that acquiring their dream 195 is now financially within reach, sooner than they originally anticipated.
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The last flight I made in my 1953 Piper Pacer, N3323A, was on April 20, 2016. The airplane was in Vancouver, Washington, for its annual inspection before a planned trip to Alaska, and I took advantage of a Portland work layover to take a good friend and his two young boys on a scenic flight. It turned out that sometime during our two-hour tour, perhaps while we were circling Mount St. Helens, the engine began quietly tearing itself apart, eventually dropping a sizable piece of main bearing into the oil pan—all the while running smoothly, indications in the green. I didn’t learn of our close brush with fate until a few days later when the Pacer went into the shop. Within a few weeks, I sold it as-is, where-is, and to my knowledge it has not flown since.

It was a sad end to an adventure-filled 18 months of ownership, but in reality that chapter was closing anyway. Dawn and I were selling everything to buy a sailboat and run away to sea. This too turned out to be a grand adventure, one that lasted nearly five years. We had but one regret during that time: our near-absence from general aviation, and especially the lack of an airplane of our own. Dawn particularly felt the void; I at least had work flying to halfway scratch that itch. We determined to build our post-boat life around a return to general aviation, and accordingly, bought a lot on a grass airstrip west of Seattle and planned the build that is now underway. The only question that remained was what kind of airplane we would purchase, and when.

Sam Weigel

Sam Weigel has been an airplane nut since an early age, and when he's not flying the Boeing 737 for work, he enjoys going low and slow in vintage taildraggers. He and his wife live west of Seattle, where they are building an aviation homestead on a private 2,400-foot grass airstrip.

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