The Post

Air show’s near-tragedy

- Warren Gamble

Wellington Airport’s reputation as a hairraisin­g place to land has been highlighte­d in a short film about the near-calamitous air show for its opening 60 years ago.

As a wide-eyed teenager, Marlboroug­h film-maker Paul Davidson was among the huge crowd on October 25, 1959, who saw two near-misses, and unknowingl­y witnessed a third.

Davidson was a 14-year-old living in the Hutt Valley when he and a mate travelled by train and tram to get to the air show to celebrate the official opening of the new airport.

As he watched in gale-force northerlie­s beside the runway, he saw a delta-wing Vulcan bomber almost crash in front of him.

The bomber touched down short of the runway, rupturing part of its landing gear, wing attachment­s and engine fuel lines and narrowly avoiding clipping a wing tip that would have sent it cartwheeli­ng towards the crowd.

The pilot aborted the landing and flew the damaged plane to Ohakea where it made an emergency landing.

A Sunderland flying boat had earlier hit the runway during a low pass, tearing a hole in its keel.

The experience was tucked away in Davidson’s memory and with the 60-year anniversar­y approachin­g he decided to turn his film-making lens on it.

With the help of friends in the air force and the Air Force Museum, he tracked down some of the pilots involved, and unearthed a third near-miss that was metres away from disaster.

It involved the air force Vampire aerobatic team who came close to tragedy during a highspeed dive towards the ground before the four planes broke into different directions.

As the Vampires rolled into the dive a sudden bank of cloud obscured the ground, meaning the leader could not give the order to break. Davidson tracked down one of the pilots involved, Tom Enright, to describe the moments as the cloud finally cleared with dangerousl­y little room left.

‘‘I’m pleased how it’s turned out,’’ Davidson said of the film.

‘‘I will never forget that day and after talking to the pilots I know they never will either.’’

 ?? MATT O’SULLIVAN/AIR FORCE MUSEUM ?? The Sunderland flying boat that clipped the Wellington Airport runway during the air show for its opening in October 1959.
MATT O’SULLIVAN/AIR FORCE MUSEUM The Sunderland flying boat that clipped the Wellington Airport runway during the air show for its opening in October 1959.
 ??  ?? Former Vampire pilot Tom Enright, inset, whose plane came within a few metres of the ground during a Vampire aerobatic team display, above, at Wellington Airport in 1959.
Former Vampire pilot Tom Enright, inset, whose plane came within a few metres of the ground during a Vampire aerobatic team display, above, at Wellington Airport in 1959.
 ??  ?? The Vulcan bomber shortly after aborting its botched landing during the Labour Weekend air show.
The Vulcan bomber shortly after aborting its botched landing during the Labour Weekend air show.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand