BMPA History
History > 1998 Islington
1998 Spring Meeting, February 28 - March 1, Islington
Saturday 28th February
Morning arrivals at Stakis Hotel, Islington, lunch in lower Brasserie followed by guided tour of Tower Bridge. Reception and dinner in the Angel/Morris suite.Sunday 1st March
Lectures or guided tour of "The Famous Square Mile (2000 years of history)".36 members and guests attended all or part of this meeting.
Report
This was held on 28th February and 1st March at the recently opened Stakis hotel in Islington. 36 members and guests attended some or all of the event (those who had insisted on a London meeting were conspicuous by their absence). We gathered over lunch, which like all the food over the weekend was particularly good. As our contribution to the ecosystem (and purely incidentally to save some money) we went to Tower Bride by tube. IT was a tribute to members' navigational skills that without GPS or even an umberella to follow no one got lost or arrived late. We were taken on a standard guided tour of the bride, a triumph of Victorian engineering and shrewd politics, followed by a private tour of one of the bascules and it's operating machinery. The original engines are still in place although now replaced by oil filled hydraulic ones. The basic machinery is exactly as first installed. The tours over, people looked at the bridge in more detail or moved off to other local attractions.Saturday evening's dinner, held in private rooms, commanded a splendid view of London. Robin Lawrence provided a generous donation for a name place raffle and we ate and drank our fill and enjoyed good fellowship.
David Ogilvy, Secretary of the GAAC spoke first on Sunday morning. He described the relationship between AOPA and GAAC - the former hosts the latter which endeavours to smooth the interface between GA and the general public. He described the increasing gulf between major/intermediate size airfields and light aviation and the increasing gulf between aviation and the public - unless they happen to be using a commercial flight at the time. As one of his horror stories he cited the case of one unfortunate German organization being sued for the noise that its gliders make. The work of the Council is divided into two main areas, education and planning. The first works both ways, to educate aviators in the likes, hates and foibles of the rest of the human race and to educate the latter in the better aspects of aviation. Planning takes and increasing part of the resources with scrutiny of district and county plans for aviation policies and advising individuals on their airfield or strip plans.
Both our next speakers were dogged by projector troubles which disrupted their thoughts but did not detract from the fascinating stories they had to tell. The projector problem was that state of the art machines will not cope with the thinner slide mounts of yesteryear, insisting on trying to swallow them two at a time.
Ray Clegg described his route to a medical qualification from steelworks (no other jobs in Sheffield) to national service as what in this day and age is known as a lab technician. Time at Millbank and experience at the Lewisham train disaster propelled him back to Sheffield as a mature student. A yen for plastic surgery was thwarted by ageism so he settled for otolaryngology and the reconstructive aspects of head and neck surgery. He subsequently and recently acquired the well known but little used qualification MBBT (Maker of Bigger Boys' Toys) by building a KIS composite 2 seater. As an afterthought he learned to fly and since he has now acquired a 4 seater project he has moved house to acommodate the embryo squadron.
Simon Janvrin led us through a career which started at Guys and then took him to the Zambian Flying Doctor Service. His account of surgery, even on hearts, under difficult conditions with a text book handy, done against the magnificent backdrop of Mt. Kilamanjaro was gripping. A return to the UK and a surgical consultancy in the CAAs back yard at Gatwick allowed him to pursue a belief in change, in this instance by crossing the fence into aviation medical work. He is also a home builder with a project in the loft. The CAA policy at that time was that all their chief medical examiners should also pilot scheduled services. In due course the opportunity came to do that full time. His enthusiasm for his job and his Fokker Friendship was glowing testimony to his policy of a life's change of direction every seven years.
Those who didn't listen to the morning's presentations joined one of the "London Walks" tours of the alleys and byways of the famous square mile. We all reassembled over lunch before finally dispersing.
Andrew Clymo
1998 Lectures
- The General Aviation Awareness Council - What it does and how it does it (David Ogilvy OBE)
- How to build an aeroplane in your consulting room (and acquire epoxy pox) (Raymond Clegg)
- The life and times of a consultant surgeon, CAA medical officer and airline pilot (Simon Janvrin)
