Well, what can I say. This was almost a complete washout. Half the stuff meant to fly didn't and the weather was awful making for difficult picture taking. We were soaked, then dry, then soaked etc, etc, etc. A real shame because tomorrow will be amazing weather.
Thing is, I booked early to get a discount on tickets. I shan't be doing that again because if I'd held off, I could've been there tomorrow...and I saved £6...what's that worth when the weather is rubbish and some of the planes don't fly.
Regardless, I grabbed 1600 pictures (lots of multiples as they flew by) and I'll post them later. Please be aware, I'm not a photographer and I've recently just taken ownership of a Nikon D40X DSLR (my first ever DSLR - I always used a bridge camera) with both a 55-70mm and a 70-300mm lenses...so I'm not entirely sure I knew what I was doing. Sometimes the flash came on, sometimes it didn't. Sometimes I noticed I was on AUTO mode, others I noticed I was on Sport mode and others, some other mode!!
So the images will be the best I could do given a new camera and the bad weather. If anyone has any tips for future bad weather airshows, please feel free to enlighten me.
Pictures to follow. I've got some conversion to do, selection and uploading them - so they may be on here tomorrow.
Here's a preview



Spits being chased by an Me109

Some stunning aircraft. Unfortunately the weather was awful and the Sally B (B17) didn't fly, the Mig-15 didn't fly, the Vampires didn't fly, the mass of Spitfires (about 10 or 12) didn't fly, the WWI biplanes didn't fly....overall, not the best day at the airshow.
I will definitely hold off until I see the weather next time.
The US Hanger is superb

One cool thing they did this year was hold a bomber briefing. We all sat in a room as "pilots, navigators, bombadiers, gunners, rad-ops" and had a briefing on our bombing run that evening. Very cool.
Also, there was a US Marine there who was injured 4 times in the Pacific who got a standing ovation during the briefing.
