First: The C-180's in my prior post should be listed as C-182's.
I also forgot the Cherokee 6 we used to jump in Lakewood.
I've never had the controls in my hands. Really wish I did! Matter of fact, the ONLY planes I've LANDED in, besides commercial airliners (yea, I HATE flying commercial, would much rather drive) were 2 different C-182's. One in Burlington County NJ (the jump door wouldn't open!

), the other in Maryland when we couldn't get enough altitude (clouds @ 1800').
My brother has only been on one plane flight in his life. We put the right seat in the Cherokee 6 & he went on a jump run. All the way to altitude (8000') the pilot, George (an old retired AF pilot), explained the instruments & controls to my brother. After dropping the load, George pointed the plane dead east (Lakewood is about 8 miles from the Atlantic Ocean), let go of the wheel, turned to my brother & said, "Take it." My brother says, "Me? Take this? I-don't-want-it, you-keep-it!!!!!" LOL He did take the controls. They flew down the beach a ways, turned around & flew back up the beach, & eventually made it back. They'd been flying around for over 30 minutes after dropping the jumpers! He was so pumped after that flight it was funny. "I can breathe!!! My sinuses are clear!!!! I can't believe how clean the air is up there!!!"

You ever see a 200+lb guy bouncing in a wheelchair?

I have!
The plane I'd most want to take a ride in: SR-71. It wasn't until a year or 2 after Lakewood closed that I found out why one of our part-time pilots was so much smoother than all the others: He flew SR-71's! Also found out where his nick-name "Boomer" came from. Did you know the SR-71 will do in excess of mach-2
ON THE DECK?
