Ferrying Europa G-BWON to The Netherlands
A couple of weeks ago my brother Marcel purchased a Europa Classic Tri-Gear, registered as G-BWON.
In the weeks leading up to that purchase, I was involved from afar, evaluating a lot of pictures, email statements from the prior owners, etc., trying to fill in the blanks for Marcel. In the end he went ahead with it and decided to purchase the two seater.
Shortly thereafter Marcel called me to ask what I thought about the weather for the coming weekend. Initially I was a bit apprehensive, but more in-depth analysis that was confirmed by evolving forecasts during the following day made the two of us agree about this window of opportunity.
Early Thursday evening I jumped into my car and arrived at Marcel’s place around midnight. Meanwhile Marcel scrambled for his gear and arranged for us to fly to East-Midlands the following morning.

As Marcel already published his narrative of our aircraft ferry adventure, I’ll restrict myself to some background information here. There’s no point in publishing the same story twice, is there?
The weather
The weather pretty much developed as we had expected. It was a bit colder than I fancy, so my not flying and hanging around at Tatenhill Airfield while Marcel got his training was somewhat testing.
Almost clear skies, good visibility and almost no winds were with us well into next day’s ferry flight, up to our approaching the Belgium coast. Here we needed to descent to remain in VMC, also we had to dodge some small cumuli. It was a sight to behold…
Tatenhill Airfield (EGBM)
Tatenhill Airfield is a former bomber training airfield that was built early on in WW-II. It is located in the vicinity of Burton-on-Trent.
Of the three standard RAF intersecting runways, 22/04 and 17/35 have been closed down. These are currently used to park aircraft. On one of these G-BWON was parked when Marcel took possession of her. The remaining runway in use is 26/08.

Tatenhill Airfield is slated for a major upgrade in the coming years. This is nice for all airport users, not just for the helicopter ambulance service that was based here recently - they are still housed in what at best could be called a makeshift barrack.
Local gossip has it that when Princess Ann had commuted in for one of her appointments in the region, she needed to visit ‘the ladies’, only to find that the flush wasn’t that royal at all. The gossip goes on to state that the development plans gained momentum after she informed her mum about the local situation.
Is this a fact or merely local folklore? I haven’t got the foggiest, but I reckon that this bit of gossip will not be forgotten anytime soon. I for one can confirm that I have seen better and cleaner airstrip lavatories. Anyway, unlike the gossip alluded to above, this will be a thing of the past before too long…
Manston Approach / Manston Radar
UK as well as European pilots (yes, this distinction is intentional, I will keep thinking about it this way until the UK also joins the Schengen-Agreement…) informed us that we would want to forget about London Information for crossing the Channel and rather contact Manston Radar for flight following. According to the reports, this unit is much more in tune with general aviation requirements and also has shorter communication channels with rescue services should we need those. Needless to point out that we heeded this advice.
Manston Radar had a lot of traffic on their frequency. When Marcel managed to squeeze his call in between two others, Manston handled communications very efficiently. After stating our intentions, we got a transponder code from them and the instruction to report leaving the coast. After that coast-crossing call we were instructed to report the FIR boundary, that was all.
We crossed the channel at the highest available VFR flight level, which initially was FL055. Later on we could have step climbed a bit higher, but in the end we didn’t.
EHMZ - Midden-Zeeland
That day EHMZ was PPR, which was a measure to be able to inform visiting pilots about the airstrip being rather wet and somewhat soggy. Also, we were told not to touch down on the first 150m (450′). I don’t know why this information was not simply published with a NOTAM instead of making the strip PPR.

Whatever, with this prior knowledge, using EHMZ for a refueling stop was not too much of a problem. Friends of ours from the Rotterdam area had rented an airplane to meet us at Midden-Zeeland. Unfortunately, they had to return before we had a chance to shake hands. Their gesture was appreciated a lot by both of us.
Welcome at EHHO - Hoogeveen
This strip was in much better shape than EHMZ, so touching down there was even simpler.

By now Marcel was fiddling with the electric trim switches on the stick and the power lever without even looking at them, occasionally checking the panel for proper manifold pressure. He was settling in all right.
We were greeted by friends and family. Some of our nephews were present as well. On this cold day they had to wait a bit longer than originally intended due to our initial delays. It was great to see so much interest in Marcel’s endeavors!
Some ferry flight statistics
- We took off from Tatenhill very close to maximum take-off weight. The plane nevertheless climbed well over 700 fpm.
- Most of our flight across the British countryside was at appr. 2500′, an exception being the time we were creeping under the north eastern part of London Standsted CTA. Here we flew a bit below 1500′. An overhead ‘heavy’ illustrated why flying that low over there is a good thing.
- From Braintree onwards, we step climbed where airspace restrictions permitted this, ending up at FL055 when starting the Channel crossing.
- Tatenhill to Midden-Zeeland took a bit under 2:30 hours
- Midden-Zeeland to Hoogeveen took some 1:10 hours.
Mission accomplished
In closing I’d like to thank Graham Singleton and Bob Hitchcock for our many interesting and spirited talks. Especially talking to and getting to know Graham, whose aviation history goes back to before when I was a teenager glider pilot, was very special.
Andy Draper, formerly employed at the Europa kitplane factory and currently with the LAA, has my deserved gratitude as well, not only for training Marcel the way he did - all of us learned valuable lessons that day.
And then, of course, there is Marcel to thank as well! Being invited for the ride to support finalising a process that was spread over a couple of months will remain a very very special event for the rest of my life. Perhaps one day he’ll be my safety pilot