• Welcome to SportsJournalists.com, a friendly forum for discussing all things sports and journalism.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register for a free account to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Access to private conversations with other members.
    • Fewer ads.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Smallest airport you've used (commercially)

Hank_Scorpio said:
I routinely fly out of the Beaumont Airport, Hair Care and Tire Center.

...Has to be next door to the Beaumont Seminary School, Bar & Grill, where the last pastor of my grandmother's church, that the church fired last year, got his divinity degree.
 
Beat the Bakers Narrows airport that is about 15 miles south of Flin Flon, Manitoba north of the 54th parallel. Whenever you land there you are convinced the plane will go off the end of the runway into Lake Athapapuskow. I've heard the passengers applaud when the pilot managed to stop the plane.
 
In my days covering the Southland Conference, I flew to seemingly every rinky-dink airport in Louisiana. Monroe, Alexandria, Lafayette ... jumbo jets need not apply.
 
Birdscribe said:
Treadly Doright said:
Commercially - Riverton, Wyo.;

Riverton has an airport? Damn, the place didn't get a McDonald's until 1981.

I know this because I had a crush on a girl from there who's brother -- attention, MileHigh -- played on a Little League Western Regional team. We were pen pals (alas, nothing more) for several years.
There actually is an airport there, and I've eaten at the McDonald's, too. I flew United from Chicago to Denver, hopped a United Express prop job in Denver and bounced through the air to Riverton. My bag was less fortunate. It was deemed to be too heavy for the final leg and arrived the next day.
 
JR said:
Toronto Island Airport. Like a largish bus terminal.

That one's a beauty. Instead of the 45-minute commute out to the huge one, I once walked off a plane there, rolled my suitcase over the little bridge and down the street to the Westin Harbour Castle.

How many major cities can you say that about?
 
Manhattan, KS. Get off the plane and from the runway you can see buffalo running around in a farm across the street.
 
markvid said:
Bradford, PA.
Pilots had to do a hard bank in there to land, as it was on a hill.
Hated it.
Home, sweet home. :D
Did they have to chase the deer off the runway before you could land?

Any long trips I've taken lately, I opted to drive two hours north to the Buffalo airport instead of twenty minutes to BFD. That should tell you how much I trust that place...
 
When I was a kid we were in that area a lot visiting my grandparents and there were two crashes at Bradford, fairly close to each other. Had to be in the mid-to-late 1960s sometime. Might have been Mohawk or Allegany.
 
micropolitan guy said:
When I was a kid we were in that area a lot visiting my grandparents and there were two crashes at Bradford, fairly close to each other. Had to be in the mid-to-late 1960s sometime. Might have been Mohawk or Allegany.
Christmas Eve 1968 and January 6, 1969. Same airline (Allegheny), same type of plane, same foul weather. Roller-coaster rides got nothin' on landing on the mountain during a snowstorm.
 
Birdscribe said:
Treadly Doright said:
Commercially - Riverton, Wyo.;

Riverton has an airport? Damn, the place didn't get a McDonald's until 1981.

I know this because I had a crush on a girl from there who's brother -- attention, MileHigh -- played on a Little League Western Regional team. We were pen pals (alas, nothing more) for several years.

You had a crush on a girl from Riverton? Come on, everyone knows the cool girls are from Laramie. ;)
 
Wilmington, N.C. That was a little bit after I got out of college. I can't remember if that flight was to BWI-Marshall outside of Baltimore or to Omaha.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top