Some of the best photographs I’ve ever taken have been happy accidents.
I was once a very active pilot. I’m not now; I fly desks and mixing consoles and digital workstations now, and I have gradually grown away from airplane flying. Still, airplanes and airports and the people and lore that surround them have never ceased to hold a nostalgic, passionate appeal for me. I’m afraid I have become something of an armchair pilot, but the love of aviation will never die in me.
I have a fairly long commute to and from work. To break the monotony, on Tuesday evening I decided to go home via an unusual route. The road I used is not one I’m intimately familiar with, and I had not noticed the small, grass airstrip by the roadside before. Now, two men were pushing a small Cessna 150 out of a hangar and toward the strip. Fascinated, I quickly turned the car around and returned, parking next to some telephone equipment so as not to trespass on private property.
My camera, which has been with me every day for months now, rested in its spacious new LowePro bag* next to me on the passenger seat. I grabbed it, put on the 200mm zoom lens, and practically leapt from the car just as the plane began to taxi toward the far end of the grass runway. I watched it intently through my lens. I may have been watching a bit too intently, in fact, because presently a bright yellow Piper J-3 cub came zooming in, just a foot or three above my head, landing downwind. After checking to make sure I’d kept what little hair I have on my head, I snapped a few frames of the perfect landing.
Moments later I saw the cloud of dust that heralded the application of full power by the Cessna, and I once again raised the camera. I shot one frame just as the main gear left the ground, and a second a moment later as the plane began to climb. I followed the plane with my lens, zooming out to keep it in frame, until it passed over my head and I nearly fell over backward. A gymnast I am not.
As I recovered my balance, I turned and saw the plane climbing away against a beautiful backdrop of sunlit clouds, and by happy accident, I must have tripped the shutter at precisely the right moment. When I got home and saw the image, my emotional response was absolutely shocking.
This is the moment that makes flying more than the simple balance of thrust, drag, lift, and gravity. It’s the moment when the ground that has been our master loses its power over us, and we are free to roam all three dimensions. It’s the moment when the mind, as well as the body, takes flight. Those few seconds, just after takeoff, are magic.
I share the photo with you because I hope I captured some small measure of that feeling, that longing that it inspired in me. Photography, if nothing else, is a beautiful way to communicate feelings, emotions, and those other parts of our minds and souls that do not lend themselves to mere words.
* I have an amazingly wonderful fiancee’ … have I mentioned that lately?
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Nicely done, sirrah! Thanks for sharing 🙂
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Wonderful, Scott
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Absolutely lovely photo, and a great story behind it, too.
I think photos taken with intent and emotion are the best… it really does go into the image somehow.
I love the composition – with freedom to move all around the frame!
Great work!