6th June 2025
I'm woken by my phone ringing at 0530. It's the girl I spoke to yesterday and explained that I was in Canada to, telling me that they're
not going to be able to do the pressure clean of my brick weave today and have rescheduled it for the 19th. The day I get back - fucking marvellous...
Hey-ho. I try to get back to sleep but fail initially, eventually coming to at about 0800. I'm pretty much packed, so just ablute, dress and then wheel my belongings down to the car, where a local bird seems to have expressed its displeasure at my parking there...
There's no call for that, is there?
I decide to forego the dubious pleasures of the complimentary breakfast, and, with today's destination programmed into Waze, set off into a humid, hazy morning. It's already 20C and forecast to get warmer. Huntsville's forecast is for thunderstorms, which is why I'm heading south to...
Hamilton!
Traffic is pretty light at first. I'm basically going nearly all the way back to Toronto, so I'm familiar with the road. I pull off at a service area to visit a Canadian institution...
Tim Hortons is a part of the Canadian landscape - I believe they have mobile units that they deployed to Afghanistan, much as the US have Burger Kings and the like, to improve the troops' morale...
Hang on a tick...
That's not a standard Dodge Charger - it must have been drawn here by the donuts...
...and donuts there are, aplenty...
Rather oddly, you are required to enter your choices into a display, rather than at the counter. The displays aren't new to anyone who's used a MacDonalds recently, but the fact that it's the
only way to order is. I order a large white coffee, a lemonade and a 'breakfast scramble', or something...
...which turns out to be a delicious mix of hash browns, scrambled eggs, bacon and sausage...
Onward!
The further south I go, the heavier the traffic becomes. The visibility is also getting really poor - it looks like there’s an atmospheric inversion here and there's a
lot of haze...
I'm not sure if it's smog - but I'm glad I opted to keep the lid closed and the ac on...
Eventually, after a few traffic snarl ups (there's just
so much traffic), I arrive at
The Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum at Hamilton Airport.
It's difficult to miss the entrance with a display like that...
I pay my (seniors) entrance fee, then do things a bit backwards by going to the gift shop first...
Thank
God they didn't have my size...
I'm
so tempted by one of these, but those who know me are aware I'm trying to control my clock addiction...
It's a huge gift shop, catering for most demography...
Beautiful little diorama...
Having bought a couple of things, I head into the museum...
By the way, if you're not interested in aircraft and aviation, you might want to go and have a cup of tea, rather than continue...
There are a series of exhibits charting the history of the RCAF, which was formed in 1920, two years after the RAF. Canadians were very much involved in aviation during the Great War - Capt Roy Brown being famously the pilot who shot down Von Richtofen "The Red Baron"...
There is a lot of the ephemera oof war, like this searchlight. My father flew Lancasters during the last unpleasantness and being caught in the beam of one of these over Germany would not have improved his chances of survival...
Pieces of history, donated by descendants...
Hah! A Link Trainer - we had one of these in my Air Cadet squadron. It's powered electro-pneumatically and was a nightmare to keep serviceable. It had a serious purpose, to practice instrument flying and navigation...
The instructor would watch the instruments and the plotter would show how accurately the route was being flown...
Time to step into the hangar...
This one surprised me. At first glance it's an A6 Harvard (or Texan), but this version is a
Yale - still named for a university, but the Yale had fixed undercarriage and a slightly lower powered engine. Originally built for the French Air Force as a trainer, the aircraft purchased ended up in Canada.
The difficulties with the differences between the Harvard and the Yale, resulting in several accidents, resulted in the Yale being removed as a pilot training aircraft.
This beautiful Beech C-45 Expeditor was used as a multi-engine trainer, a transport and for aerial photography.
This is the Canadian equivalent to the RAF's Jet Provost...
The Canadair Tutor...
Rather incongruous in this hangar - a Nanchung CJ-6, I think - very capable aerobatic aircraft...
Always the star of any museum, this Spitfire is slightly unusual...
...in that it's got clipped wings - optimised for use at low-level...
It’s an LF MkXVIe...
I get the impression it has been moved temporarily, as it is clearly meant to sit in the corner by this painted mural...
Lovely old Catalina...
Called the Canso in Canadian service, this one is been painted to represent the aircraft that
Flt Lt David Hornell VC flew when he won his VC...
We're on the starboard side of the hangar now, where there are a lot of projects in various stages of play. This Vampire was actually built by the Swiss, under licence, and is one of the last three Vampires built...
Here's the main event...
In the throes of a major refit, this airframe represents one of only two Lancasters in airworthy condition - the other being owned by the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight at RAF Coningingsby in the UK.
Its Merlins stripped, it'll take a while to get this old girl back together and into the air...
Famous as a WWII bomber, it's most commonly known for the raid against the Ruhr Valley dams, and the film The Dambusters, that was made to commemorate it...
The "Upkeep" bouncing bomb...
...which weighed over 9000lbs, and the apparatus necessary to spin it, allowing it to bounce, avoiding the anti-torpedo booms, and hit the dam...
There's a difficult to photograph diorama next to the aircraft...
More later - food has arrived!