Posted by martin perman on 18/01/2019 21:08:45:
The ATC are still at Cardington and have a brand new facility care of a Developer who turned a third of the airfield into homes
Yep, seen the houses from the air; great shame. I've visited Cardington a number of times over the years. First time in the 1960s I had a ride in a barrage balloon – wait for it – inside one of the sheds. I had a friend at the NAE Aero Club at Twinwood Farm who, as a schoolboy, had seen the R101 on it's mast at Cardington from his school dorm. It must have been an impressive sight.
Both my parents flew gliders in the 1940s, 50s and 60s. My father was on the BGA Tech committee in the 1960s and was part of the design group at Bedford which developed the Olympia 4 series gliders. As a kid I used to cycle up to Twinwood Farm and explore. Eventually I got rides in the Blanik and TIger Moth.
I started gliding properly when I went to RAE Farnborough after I left school. I learnt on a K7 and K13 and progressed to the Olympia 2, but wasn't allowed to fly the Pirat, although I have flown one since. Over the years I've flown at Twinwood Farm, Thurliegh, Sackville Farm, Lyveden and now Gransden Lodge. I did a lot of flying in a Blanik at Twinwoods. Quite an advanced glider for it's era, albeit rather a complex build structure, as befits a commercial aircraft company. One design hiccup was that the levers for the spoilers (pretty useless) and the Fowler flaps were the same size, shape and colour and were about two inches apart on the same side of the cockpit.
I did my Silver height and duration in an Oly2B in stubble fires (RIP) and Silver distance in an Oly463; flew it back as well as the club members said they weren't coming to collect me. All from Twinwood Farm. Gold distance and Diamond Goal were flown from Lyveden in the early 90s and Gold height at Talgarth. Diamond height was first done at Aboyne, having just missed it in a wave flight over Snowdon. Best distance so far is 450km. Currently flying a DG200 and Nimbus 3DT with the odd flight in an Oly2B and, hopefully this year, a Skylark 4.
Not sure how many types I've flown but there have been some oddities including a SHK, FK3, K18, Kestrel 22, SF27 and a Mucha.
I started power flying while I was doing post doc research at Cambridge in this:

Then I flew the Tiger Moth at Thurleigh, a Super Cub at Sackville (where I started towing) and a Wilga at Lyveden. At Gransden we had a Rallye and Pawnee, but now have two Robin DR400s. In the past I've owned shares in a RF5 and Auster.
Total hours, gliding and power, something around 3000.
Occasionally I also dabble in model engineering. 
Andrew