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Crowd Looks Up to Little Planes

Ventura County

August 26, 2001|TIMOTHY HUGHES, TIMES STAFF WRITER

Powered by snowmobile engines and maneuvered by thin nylon and metal wings, the ultralight planes that opened the Camarillo Air Show on Saturday sounded like a team of lawn mowers buzzing overhead.

With top speeds of 60 mph and a flying altitude of about 500 feet, the home-built planes were a stark contrast to the sleek Yak-3A Russian fighter, the F-18 Hornet and the speedy, World War II-era F8F-2 Bearcat that zipped by soon after. But as the seven pilots from the Ventura County Ultralight Aircraft Society did their opening fly-by, there was no shortage of oohs and ahs from the several thousand people who gathered on the hot Camarillo Airport tarmac.


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The ultralights were among the more than 60 aircraft that soared across cloudless skies. Now in its 21st year, the event continues today with the gates opening at 8 a.m. and flying demonstrations starting at 10 a.m.

The event, which started as a small get-together of interest mostly to pilots and hard-core aviation buffs, has grown into one of the largest and most popular air shows in Southern California, said Pat Brown, an event spokeswoman.

Visitors Saturday rode in a helicopter, toured several dozen vintage aircraft on the tarmac and shopped for everything from model airplanes to military dog tags.

For the ultralight pilots, the day meant sharing a passion that they say combines seat-of-your-pants thrills with an adrenaline release unlike anything else on the planet.

"There is an absolute freedom when I'm flying," said Kevin Nilsen, a stocky, 45-year-old general contractor from Simi Valley. "It isn't relaxing. Your senses are so heightened. You have to be aware at all times, but every time I take off, I get the same rush."

Nilsen bought his three-wheel ultralight for $13,000 about a year after his wife, Susan, was killed in a car crash in February 1999.

Whenever he is airborne, whether on a flight to Catalina Island or just above the farmlands of Ventura County, Nilsen said, Susan is in his thoughts.

"When I was thinking about buying [the plane], I thought, 'What would Susan want me to do?' " said Nilsen, wearing wrap-around sunglasses and a hat with "Flys Like a Trike" stitched on the front. "Now I think about her whenever I go up."

Before taking off, Nilsen and the other ultralight pilots went over a detailed flight plan with club founder Ken Holden.

Ultralights have wingspans of 29 to 39 feet and most weigh less than 250 pounds.

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