Throwing some Shade

The B-25J “Maid in the Shade
Photo lifted from the Commemorative Air Force

We had a blast from the past yesterday in The Duck! City.

As I was out riding trails on the Bianchi Zurigo Disc I heard a low-flying aircraft overhead. Glancing up I saw the unmistakable shape of a B-25 medium bomber rumbling northward.

The Auld Fella, Col. Harold J. O’Grady (USAF), got some time in the B-25 when he wasn’t working his day job flying C-47 Skytrains out of New Guinea during World War II (“The Big One”).

Introduced in 1941, the North American B-25 Mitchell was named in honor of Brigadier General William “Billy” Mitchell, as was the Bibleburg high school Your Humble Narrator attended without distinction during 1969-71.

This particular model, a B-25J dubbed “Maid in the Shade,” was based out of Serraggia Airbase in Corsica during 1944 and saw service over Italy, which was appropriate, as I was riding a Bianchi.

Happily, the Maid was unarmed, and I escaped unscathed to tell the story.

10 thoughts on “Throwing some Shade

  1. Cool old airplane. When I was in NROTC, I once got to tour a B-17. Not flying, just sitting on the ground at a military base. And for part of a summer cruise, they flew the U of R midshipman detachment between bases on an old C-47 (yep, it was that long ago) and through a thunderstorm, to boot.

    And speaking of “incoming”, while reading the papers this morning, I sure am glad to be riding a bikey-bike around Fanta Se this weekend rather than taking the motorcycle on a trip up to Taos or Red River.

    1. We got to scope out a bunch of classic warbirds during Armed Forces Days at various USAF bases. It was amazing to set foot inside the real deal after a steady diet of movies and TV shows. Gave you a feel for just how spartan and cramped these spaces were. And mind you, we were kids on a lark, not adults getting shot at.

    1. The news video actually had to black out the flipped bird image? Wow. I think I just felt George Carlin chuckling in his grave mumbling something about words in public.

    1. I test rode a Ducati Monster a friend of mine was selling before I bought the BMW sport touring rig that I eventually brought home (and I can’t recall Meena’s exact words, but they would not be printable in a family newspaper). The Ducati gave me The Fear, because I knew what I would be tempted to do if I bought it, and “auger in” comes to mind. It was too one-dimensional and raw, and I don’t do crazy shit on motorcycles any more.

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