2009 Let’s Go Flying Sweepstakes Grand Prize Awarded
AOPA surprised FedEx captain
Michael Graves on Sunday, naming him the winner of a 2005 Cirrus
SR22, the 2009 Let’s Go Flying sweepstakes grand prize.
The SR22 was donated by philanthropist and veteran B-29 pilot Lloyd
Huck to build excitement and interest in aviation
“Unbelievable! Awesome!” the Graves, 55, exclaimed
while his wife LaDona, 13-year-old daughter Ariel, and friends who
had gathered to watch the Superbowl screamed with excitement at the
announcement. Graves flies Airbus A300s primarily within
Europe and lives at Alta Sierra, CA, a residential airpark where he
flies his Cessna 180.
The sneaky setup started with Graves coworker, Jimmy Rollison
flew in a “Sky King” Songbird III Cessna 310,
ostensibly for a photo shoot of the famed airplane at the tiny
field. AOPA President Craig Fuller and AOPA Pilot Senior
Editor Dave Hirschman soon followed in the Cirrus, with Graves
marshalling it in himself, thinking it was the chase plane for the
Songbird III.

Michael Graves in his new SR22
Graves recognized Fuller, but could not place the name or face
at first. "I heard you were doing some filming out here
today," Fuller said, continuing with the ruse. He told Graves that
he had wanted to stop by to watch some of the filming and had two
gifts for him. The first was an AOPA Challenge Coin representing
the association’s recent seventieth anniversary.
Then, Fuller proceeded to explain to Graves that AOPA gives away
a sweepstakes airplane every year, to which Graves immediately
responded that he read all about the airplanes in the magazine.
(Yes, he was still clueless.)
"The second thing I want to give you is the key to the
airplane," Fuller said, "You’re the winner!"
After taking a quick first flight, Graves said "It’s a
fantastic flying airplane. It’s going to take some
getting used to, but I already know we’re going to love
it." LaDona is a nervous passenger, but Graves said she would
love flying in an aircraft with a parachute.

File Photo of Cirrus SR22
During the year, AOPA used the Cirrus to demonstrate the utility
and versatility of general aviation. This plane took part in
AOPA’s advocacy efforts, flying staff to Robertson Field in
Connecticut for an open house that was staged to help save the
airport. The flying billboard also attended the 100th anniversary
of College Park Airport in a suburb of Washington, D.C., and helped
transport a wounded soldier from Florida to Washington, DC, through
the Veterans Airlift Command.
"The generosity and commitment from individuals like Lloyd Huck,
and the enthusiasm of the people who have flown in the airplane and
seen it at air shows, has been nothing short of astounding,"
Hirschman said. "It's been a privilege to see their eyes light up
when they see general aviation's potential, and their desire for
flying to be an integral part of their lives."
AOPA’s 2010 Fun to Fly
sweepstakes is under way with a the grand prize of a light sport
aircraft, the 2010 Remos GX.