A sad day
Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2009 11:44 am
I lost a good friend today.
Some of you who are current/ex radio control enthusiasts may be familiar with Balsa USA. Ron Busch, the founder and president, died today of cancer.
To meet Ron for the first time, you would think he was some homeless person who just crawled out from under a rock. He was rough and gruf on the outside, but the man had a heart of gold.
Just after I got my PPL, Ron purchased an Ercoupe, and insisted that I fly
it....at no expense to me. He wouldn't even let me pay for the gas.
I was fixing up a hangar at MNM and there was a spot where birds perpetually made a nest inside. We came into the hangar one day to find baby birds on the floor, as they had fallen out of their nest. I was ready to just put them outside, but Ron went out and got some worms at a bait shop and proceeded to feed them. He always had a soft spot for animals.
Ron restored two Piper Cubs and four Ercoupes. He was the type of guy who once he started a project, he could not put it down. Full bore until it was completed. When he would complete a restoration, he would always say that he was not going to do another. But then we would see another basket case in his hangar.
Over one's lifetime you come across individuals that leave a lasting impression on you. Ron fits the bill.
Rest in peace my friend.
Some of you who are current/ex radio control enthusiasts may be familiar with Balsa USA. Ron Busch, the founder and president, died today of cancer.
To meet Ron for the first time, you would think he was some homeless person who just crawled out from under a rock. He was rough and gruf on the outside, but the man had a heart of gold.
Just after I got my PPL, Ron purchased an Ercoupe, and insisted that I fly
it....at no expense to me. He wouldn't even let me pay for the gas.
I was fixing up a hangar at MNM and there was a spot where birds perpetually made a nest inside. We came into the hangar one day to find baby birds on the floor, as they had fallen out of their nest. I was ready to just put them outside, but Ron went out and got some worms at a bait shop and proceeded to feed them. He always had a soft spot for animals.
Ron restored two Piper Cubs and four Ercoupes. He was the type of guy who once he started a project, he could not put it down. Full bore until it was completed. When he would complete a restoration, he would always say that he was not going to do another. But then we would see another basket case in his hangar.
Over one's lifetime you come across individuals that leave a lasting impression on you. Ron fits the bill.
Rest in peace my friend.