Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
Dysko

Francesco Baracca Memorial Day 2012

Recommended Posts

Every year on Francesco Baracca Airfield, in Nervesa della Battaglia, near the Piave river in Italy, there is a small airshow to commemorate the anniversary of the death of Italian top scoring Ace Francesco Baracca, who flew from this airfield and was shot down and killed near this place on 19 june 1918.

In the place where his corpse and plane were found, in 1936 this monument was built, with a dedication by poet Gabriele d'Annunzio, great friend of Baracca and himself an observer on Italian bombers in WW1 (he organised the famous flight over Vienna, where Italian bombers dropped thousands of propaganda leaflets).

_MG_0513_170612.jpg

 

At the entrance of the airfield, there is a memorial dedicated to all those who lost their life in the Battle of the Solstice (a major Austro-Hungarian offensive across Piave river, that was ultimately stopped by the Italian Army).

_MG_0514_170612.jpg

 

This airshow was also the last part of a raid organised by Italian Biplane Club:

_MG_0594_170612.jpg

 

Radial engines, everywhere!

_MG_0525_170612.jpg

 

The beautiful Beech 17 Staggerwing that toured the world with Bill Charney at the commands:

_MG_0537_170612.jpg

 

_MG_0541_170612.jpg

 

_MG_0932_170612.jpg

 

Airplanes kept going back and forth to fly over the Baracca Memorial.

_MG_0712_170612.jpg

 

_MG_0733_170612.jpg

 

This is a Macchi MB.308, the first airplane built in Italy after WW2. This particular plane was flown by newsreport company Incom, and was used for aerial films for the newsreport "La settimana Incom" ("Incom weekly"). Now it is flown by the President of Historic Aircraft Group Italy.

_MG_0805_170612.jpg

 

Low pass in formation with an Aeronca 65:

_MG_0827_170612.jpg

 

_MG_0832_170612.jpg

 

Maneuvering with a bicycle gear requires lot of attention.

_MG_0684_170612.jpg

 

A flying replica of the Fokker Dr.I flown by baron Manfred von Richtofen, the "Red Baron".

_MG_0677_170612.jpg

 

A Fieseler Fi.156 Storch replica. It certainly retains the STOL capabilities of the original aircraft: while other planes rotated in front of me, this was already very high in the sky!

_MG_0820_170612.jpg

 

I thought Snoopy's doghouse was a Sopwith Camel...

_MG_0724_170612.jpg

 

The President of Biplano Club Italia was flying with an Enjoy ultralight biplane:

_MG_0722_170612.jpg

 

3 Stearmans brought us back in time to the barnstorming era:

_MG_0528_170612.jpg

 

_MG_0883_170612.jpg

 

_MG_0911_170612.jpg

 

In the hangar there was a P-51 Mustang replica. I got closer to the plane, and noticed this small helicopter. I didn't know anything about it, except for a sign that said "Scorpion single seat helicopter". Searching on the web, I discovered this is a quite rare Rotorway Scorpion I homebuilt helicopter.

_MG_0651_170612.jpg

 

This Diamond Super Dimona motorglider made a great display:

_MG_0634_170612.jpg

 

Then "Blue Voltige" display team on Fournier RF-5 motorgliders:

_MG_0601_170612.jpg

 

There was also usual traffic, like autogyros...

_MG_0791_170612.jpg

 

...and trikes:

_MG_0945_170612.jpg

 

Who is this plane's father? (only for Star Wars fans!)

_MG_1003_170612.jpg

 

A Sky Arrow ultralight:

_MG_0986_170612.jpg

 

The cockpit of a Wolf W-11 ultralight biplane used by display team "Boredom Fighters Team":

_MG_1021_170612.jpg

 

There were also historic utility vehicles: 2 Willys and a FIAT Campagnola (Italian successor of the Willys):

_MG_0623_170612.jpg

 

Ford M151 MUTT:

_MG_0516_170612.jpg

 

One of only 8 Hummer H1 in Italy:

_MG_0629_170612.jpg

 

Finally, some Photoshop "jokes".

This photo could have been taken in the USA in the Thirties...

_MG_0911_170612.jpg

 

Since I couldn't take a decent photo of the cockpit of the Dr.I, I imagined Snoopy's enconuters with the Red Baron...

_MG_0677_170612.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Lovely selection of pictures, that Staggerwing is a fantastic looking aeroplane... :clapping:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, and We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue..