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The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

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  • The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

    As I mentioned a few weeks ago, a group of us intended to fly to Berlin to land at the airport of the Berlin Airlift, Tempelhof.

    May 2008 is the 60th anniversary of the airlift, and the 65th anniversary of the famous "Dambusters" raid on the dams of the Ruhr valley.

    The group would consist of almost 70 pilots & passengers from all over the UK.

    Me & flying buddy Martin (lurker of this parish) departed Leicester and had good visibility but a slight headwind on the three-hour flight to Holland.
    Landing at the sub-sea-level Midden Zeeland, we cleared customs and had lunch before flying on to our overnight stop.


    Above: Cranked approach to Midden Zeeland in Holland

    Planning to camp under the wing at Korbach in Germany, we had opportunity to fly over the first two of the three dams involved in the Ruhr raid: The Möhne and Sorpe. We tried to simulate the approach paths of the Lancasters as they would have aimed at the dams, but we were obviously a bit higher (and we were in daylight).


    Above: Sorpe Dam


    Above: The Möhne Dam

    After symbolically doffing our caps to the memories of those brave men, we continued to Korbach. Five countries (England, France, Belgium, Holland and Germany) in one day.

    Korbach has a little grass strip quite close to the village.


    Above: Korbach Airfield

    The manager acquired some mogas from the village, and then kindly drove us in to get some beers and dinner.

    The whole town was like a museum, with 13th Century wooden-framed houses all immaculately maintained.


    Above: Korbach village...and yes, the spire really is bent over.

    The barman at the last bar we stopped in was a flyer, so he gave us a lift back to the airfield.

    The following day we continued to the last of the three dams...the Eder. We also passed some impressive castles & monuments.


    Above: German castle

    Three hours later, as we approached Berlin Tempelhof, we were asked to hold for 15 minutes or so while some IFR traffic arrived, then we received clearance for a right base for 09L.


    Above: Right base


    Above: Short final for 09L, looking under the left wing at the vast apron & terminal. The curved roof is 3/4 mile long.


    Above: The apron is huge, dwarfing even the jets.


    Above: The airport was designed in the 1920's, and was one of Europe's three iconic pre-war airports - the others being London's Croydon Airport and Paris' Le Bourget. During the airlift, about 2 million tons of goods were flown in, three-quarters of it coal.


    Above: On the apron was parked John Candlish's beautiful Taylorcraft, but we didn't manage to meet up.

    In the evening, 67 of us met for dinner in the Reichstag, the old Parliament building.






    Next morning, some of us were treated to a guided tour of the airport complex.


    Above: It's difficult to comprehend the scale of this building. 1400 rooms and 270,000 square metres, when built it was the third largest building in the world. Now it's the 18th.


    Above: From the roof, you can see the terraces upon which it was intended spectators would sit to watch Germanic aeronautical events.


    Above: Portions of the cantilevered roof are enclosed to form hangars, although the whole roof is self-supporting and not attached to the concrete & stone building. G-BREY is parked out there somewhere.


    Above: Passengers could embark & disembark out of the elements.

    Of course while in Berlin we had to do some touristy stuff too:


    Above: So we got our passports stamped at Checkpoint Charlie...


    Above: ...and visited one of the last remnants of the Berlin Wall.

    We had enjoyed glorious weather on the way out, so in true European fashion, the weather for the return trip had to be bad.


    Above: Departing Tempelhof

    We were OK until we got to the North Sea coast in Holland, but routing down the beach, the cloudbase dropped and visibility got a lot lower.

    These European lands are covered in windfarms, and we began to get concerned about CFIT, so decided to divert into Calais.


    Above: Passing Ostend Harbour, Belgium....


    Above: ...and Ostend airport. Cloudbase 500 feet, viz about 2 miles.




    After waking at Calais to severe clear following the overnight thunderstorms, we forewent breakfast for an early departure.


    Above: Departing Calais for the 30 mile cross-channel flight. Cross-channel ferries everywhere.

    Passing Andrewsfield at 8am local, the viz & cloudbase dropped yet again, but we stuck with it until Bourne, where we decided to land.

    An hour later, the southerly flow brought the better weather to Bourne, so we took off again but dropped into Keyston. So close to home! One hour later, all had improved enough to get to Leicester for a late breakfast. It was nice to fly with a 20kt tailwind for a change!

    All in all 18 hours and four new airfields in the logbook, and some rather-too-close-up views of the P-tips on the blades of the numerous windmills of Europe.

    Last edited by Robert Lees; 11-28-2020, 13:03.

  • #2
    Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

    Robert

    AWSOME!!! I really enjoyed the pictures. Thank you for taking the time to post them here.
    Richard Pearson
    N43381
    Fort Worth, Texas

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    • #3
      Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

      Love it Rob. Thanks for the tour!
      Mike
      NC29624
      1940 BC65

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

        Fantastic Rob! Congrats on a great trip.

        Thank you for posting such great photos and explanations.

        Why would they be tearing down Templehof airport? One would think it should be kept as a national landmark, especially since so many other historical buildings were destroyed.
        Taylorcraft : Making Better Aviators for 75 Years... and Counting

        Bill Berle
        TF#693

        http://www.ezflaphandle.com
        http://www.grantstar.net
        N26451 (1940 BL(C)-65) 1988-90
        N47DN (Auster Autocrat) 1992-93
        N96121 (1946 BC-12D-85) 1998-99
        N29544 (1940 BL(C)-85) 2005-08

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        • #5
          Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

          The buildings will be staying. The guide we were with seemed a little unsure as to what use may be made of them, though part of the airport buildings are to be taken by the Berlin Technical Museum. Others parts are to be leased out to companies. Indeed, around the rear of the buildings there were several small businesses operating successfully (we got a little unsure of position walking back there on the last day).

          The runways will be 'removed' but the green spaces will be remaining as they contribute quite significantly to the clean air around Berlin. One imagines it would make a wonderful airpark though, shame to waste those runways (not that a Taylorcraft needs such amazingly long stretches).

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          • #6
            Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

            Hey! Sorry I missed you! I was there with the Hotel-Bravo group from www.a-a-a.ch .

            The ceiling was a little low on the way there, esp EDCQ -> EDDI Friday afternoon, but all in all a very nice trip.

            Would really have liked to have met up.

            Cheers
            jCandlish
            .

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            • #7
              Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

              It well worth the effort of this discussion forumn to see this stuff posted; thank you Bob, Ruth, Rob,
              WOW Mr. Bob Rickard, sitting in my office, had a tear in his eye as he saw a Taylorcraft at Templehof ; he learned in a Taylorcraft here in 1940 and flew the C-54's ?? on the Berlin Airlift , he quickly pointed to the large curved complex when I showed it to him... thank you , thank you .....
              Taylorcraft Foundation, Inc
              Forrest A Barber 330-495-5447
              TF#1
              www.BarberAircraft.com
              [email protected]

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              • #8
                Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                Hi Rob,
                That is really great! There was a really interesting documentery about the Dambusters on PBS a while back and how they developed the bombs so they could drop them on the water and they would make it to the dam to explode. THANKS FOR POSTING IT.
                Buell
                Last edited by Buell Powell; 06-05-2008, 04:23.
                Buell Powell TF#476
                1941 BC12-65 NC29748
                1946 Fairchild 24 NC81330

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                • #9
                  Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                  That was a great trip!! I lived in Celle, Germany for 7 years (moved there in 1990 three months after the wall fell) and made several trips to Berlin, etc. Seeing your photos sure brought back some great memories! Especially the emmaculate grass strips all over Europe!
                  Thanks for letting us share your trip.
                  Jay

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                  • #10
                    Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                    Jay, as I'm sure you're aware, Celle was one of the satellite fields fundamental to the success of the airlift. We nearly went there on the return from Berlin, but decided to get as far into our journey as possible.

                    Rob

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                    • #11
                      Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                      Hi Rob,
                      To be honest I did not know of the significance of the Celle airfield until recently. It is mentioned in the Frederick Forsythe book, "The Shepard" set in the postwar time (certainly a must-read for aviation enthusiasts). However, I did not know it was a staging base for the airlift until you mentioned it!
                      The airbase was/is a helicopter base and did not have public access when we lived there.
                      Celle has another airfield to the NW of the city (a beautiful grass strip) that I visited once or twice for fly ins.
                      Thanks again for sharing your trip!
                      Jay

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                      • #12
                        Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                        Jay: here's a photo of the Celle runway being installed. The description is self-explanatory.

                        All the best,
                        Rob
                        Attached Files

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                        • #13
                          Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                          Thanks for the photo, as a youngster of just 60 I tend to forget just how these sort of things actually happened. Think about it, how do you make a runway that long with out the little Dippsie Doos (That's an American engineering term!) in the middle?
                          Larry
                          "I'm from the FAA and we're not happy, until your not happy."

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                          • #14
                            Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                            Rob: Thanks for the great photos and the history lessons involved. Also, I love the picture angles to the rear showing the Taylorcraft tail and fuselage as well as the ground subjects. Did you have a camera mounted outside or a firm grip and a long arm?

                            Carl
                            TF# 371

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                            • #15
                              Re: The Dambusters and Berlin Airlift revisited

                              The latter, Carl.

                              I have wingtip camera mounts, but have not used them since the rebuild (2 years ago), so I must get them going again, thanks for the prompt.

                              Rob

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