First Such Event For The Airport In Five Years
Special To ANN By David Juwel
After a 5-year hiatus, the Northeast Florida Regional Airport
(KSGJ) hosted an airshow this past weekend. It was almost an
international airshow ... what with the Misty Blues skydiving
team who performed here being from Ann Arbor, Michigan, a scant 36
miles from Windsor, Ontario, Canada ... but I digress. It was a
wonderful show! A grand mixture of the old and the new, slow and
fast, graceful and rambunctious. There was something for everyone,
kids and adults alike. What a wonderful value you get for your
entertainment dollar at an airshow. You get 320 mph trucks, 650 mph
jets, a woman standing on her head as she roars by on top of a
wing, and a huge robot that lifts up cars and literally chews them
in half.
Smoke, fire, and heat mixed with the culinary odors of the
concessionaires. Soft classical music one moment and the roar of a
stage six afterburner the next. You leave for the day realizing
what a phenomenal time you’ve just had, and nothing more was
required of you than to sit back in a comfortable chair and enjoy
it; all the while collecting memories with your camera. Ah yes,
give me an airshow for my weekend entertainment any day. I’ll
take it!
But airshows don’t come easy to the people that deliver
them to you. It takes a strong team of volunteers and professional
people to make one succeed as described above. Safety and security
are paramount, of course. These things didn’t occur at the
St. Augustine show without the help of men like Craig Fordem,
Director of the Airshow, and Sgt. Herrington, the St. Johns County
Sheriff’s Office, supervisor of the Unified Command
Center.
And the performers themselves, what a group of people they are.
They travel thousands of miles, and spend months away from home
like a veritable gypsy, to bring you the very best in professional
aerial and ground entertainment. They more than deserve the
applause they get.
A wonderful fact about the Northeast Florida Regional Airport is
the wide variety of aircraft that are based there. You can see
WWII, Korean, and Viet Nam era aircraft. You can see Chinese,
Russian and, of course, American military aircraft. You can see the
best in corporate, private and law enforcement aviation. All of
these were on display at the airshow. But interestingly, I
didn’t see any ultra-light aircraft there. Oh yah,
there’s the reason why. Mosquito control had already sprayed
(sorry, I couldn’t resist).
If you ever wanted to get your name out to the public, consider
becoming a sponsor for an airshow act. These people typically
perform in 20 to 30 different localities per year, before more than
2 million people. That’s pretty decent exposure.
If you missed this air show, you missed a great event. Put it on
your calendar for next year. You won’t be sorry.