CANUCK STORKMEISTER
The well-crafted article on the Fieseler Storch by Howard Cook appearing on our website recently brought a pictorial response from an air show legend named Murray Kot, the only Canadian to have owned and operated the quirky German liaison aircraft in this country. And the name brought back quite a few old memories of Ottawa’s great West Carleton Air Show days in the late 1980s at the Carp airport.
Back, then we were all just getting to know the air show business and it was our good fortune to run into a bigger-than-life character like Murray, an airline pilot who simply couldn’t get his fill of flying by hauling a couple hundred butts to Acapulco. Murray loved to party almost as much as he loved to fly and the soirées surrounding the West Carleton Air Show are still epic in memory - mostly for the larger-than-life and big-hearted Kot who charmed everyone, forgot no one and who single handedly set the tone for the years of good time air shows that would ensue.
Murray’s specialty on the air show circuit was “Losing”. No chest-pounding, flame throwing fighter demo, no vertebra-cracking snap rolls, no faux-ballet-of-the-air, no zone-5 jet thunder, no patriotic yank at the heartstrings - just a weird, hard to fly German aircraft trying to keep up to the girl in the bikini pedaling a mustang bike with handlebar streamers. Murray understood that the real appeal of the Fieseler Storch for the average air show spectator (outside of history geeks) was its amazing ability to hang in the air at speeds that your Granny would find stultifying. Throw the slats and boards out and Murray’s Storch could fly so slow he got bird strikes on the trailing edges of his wings. And if you are that slow, you never win... especially when you try to lose. So Murray would send out the tree-huggers on ten speeds, a farmer on horseback, beach bunnies with Banana-seat bikes, joggers and the odd bass boat to race against his warbird. Where ever he showed up, there was always an air show volunteer who would jump at the chance to pedal madly down a runway with a 2,500 lb. airplane hovering over their left shoulder.
Calling a race between a spandexed jogger and a Luftwaffe warbird was an airshow announcer’s dream and Murray hammed it up for the crowd like nobody’s business. Every air show worth the price of admission had a comedy act - the drunken flying farmer, the guy who never flew before, the airplane that started falling apart in the air. And Murray rivaled even the legendry Pietsch family in this arena. But all the humour and aerial goofiness belied Kot’s exceptional flying skills. The Storch was no easy-to-fly, forgiving aircraft (see Howard Cook’s story - The Lovely Stork - on this website) and to fly it at extremely slow, even reverse, ground speeds required a deft hand and a feel for the aircraft born of thousands of hours of flying experience.
Outside of his prodigious commercial flight career, Murray had a small vintage aircraft enterprise called Flying Past that specialized in the restoration, maintenance and demonstration of classic aeroplanes like the Fieseler Storch. Flying Past was based from Kot’s private airstrip in Orangeville, Ontario northwest of Toronto. The Storch was his primary aircraft and the one he demonstrated at Ontario and North East U.S. air shows. The aircraft was painted in the markings of JG-54 Grunherz (Green Hearts) Luftwaffe squadron based on the Russian front in 1942. Back in the mid-to-late 1980s when Murray was flying his Storch, it was the only example in flying operation in North America and only one of four flying airframes in the world. His Storch was built in France as a Morane-Saulnier MS-502.
The Storch arrived in Canada from France aboard a Canadian Forces C-130 Hercules and it was purchased by Kot and Ed Ruth. At the time Kot was a DC-10 Captain with Wardair and Ruth, an AME and flight engineer on Wardair’s 747s. One look at the condition of the Storch (Kot’s second) and Ruth told Murray they had to rebuild - “the right way, no time limits, and no cheaping out on materials. First we fix, then we fly.” - a tall order for a pilot rarin’ to go and excited to finally be living his dream - owning a bona fide Second World War warbird. The original airframe was powered by a Jacobs radial engine, but the rebuild included the installation of an Argus inverted V-8, the engine type used by the Luftwaffe and which gave the Storch its needle-nosed, insect-like appearance. The task of rebuilding the engine was enormous in iteslf and was accomplished by John Donaldson.
Murray sold the Storch in the early 1990s and remembers it fondly as do air show spectators back in the day. Today Kot is still as enthusiastic about aviation and is one of the true legends of the air show and vintage aircraft world here in Canada. I know a few fighter pilots from the Mississippi Air National Guard who still talk about him and his wild ways twenty years after the party. Now that’s a proper pilot legacy!
I was awkward at first, under the mistaken impression that conversation had to be constant and that silence indicated boredom. It took a number of visits with each of them to realize that these fine men take longer to process thoughts and events, and patience is imperative. As my visits increased I was welcomed by some, still unrecognized by others. Their long and medium term memories were stellar, "but ask them what they did last week" said one cynical resident.
I became engaged by listening to the same stories week after week of where my "boys" had grown up, what they had experienced in the war years and how they had adjusted when they returned to Main Street. I learned about life as a POW, being torpedoed by U-Boats and chased by Messerschmitts.