Eli’s 30 Shares – Hangar Flying


By Pat Halligan, EAA 363158

A number of months ago, I was visiting with my daughter and I was telling her how expensive general aviation flying had gotten. The airplanes, parts, fuel, insurance, etc. I told her I must be crazy, because I was in the process of buying a Cessna 206 on floats and was going to have a new engine installed. We were at her house and my five-year-old grandson was asking to see pictures of the airplane. As my daughter and I continued our discussion, my grandson jumped down off my lap, and bolted from the kitchen area. A few minutes later he showed up and said, “This is for you, Grandpa.” He handed me $30 and said it was all he had in his piggybank and wanted me to have it so I could buy the airplane. I told him, “Thanks, but you need to keep your money,” so I gave it back to him. On a few more occasions he tried to again give me the $30. I kept saying no thanks.

Well, finally I told my daughter to have Eli bring his $30 over the next time they visited. In the meantime, I typed up a certificate of ownership. It had his name, the aircraft N-number, and it said he now owned 30 shares of the airplane. I decided 30 shares for $30. I even had a picture of the airplane developed and fastened to the front of the certificate. When they showed up, I made sure he was still okay giving Grandpa the $30, and he was, so I explained how he now owned part of the airplane. I know he didn’t understand “shares,” but he did understand that he and Grandpa “owned” the airplane. I’m not sure if you, or anyone else knows of a five-year-old who “owns” part of a Cessna 206 on amphibious floats?

In early March of this year, I took Eli, his mom and dad, and his younger brother, Luke, for an airplane ride. It was their first ride in the 206. My wife and I picked them up at the Buffalo, Minnesota, airport and flew them to the Olivia, Minnesota, airport for lunch. Everyone had a blast. Eli even got a few minutes of stick time.

I found out afterward that Luke cried almost all the way home, in their car, because he didn’t want to go home — he wanted to go back to the airport and go for another airplane ride with, as he put it, “My buddy, Grandpa.” Not Grandpa, but his buddy grandpa.

Now, I need to figure out how to get Eli his $30 back. I think I’ll have him help clean a small area on the floats and give him $5 each time. So, by the time summer is over he will have earned his money back, but still own part of a 206. Thirty shares to be exact.

Grandkids are the best, especially when they may be heading toward being pilots someday.


Post Comments

comments



We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

0
Your Cart is empty!

It looks like you haven't added any items to your cart yet.

Browse Products
Powered by Caddy
Shopping cart