| Southern
Living, April 2007
Profile
of Tennessean Ron Lowery
Up,
Up and Away
The
pilot points out a seemingly flimsy flap over the plane’s
wiring. “Oh, did he show you the Duct tape?” asks
his wife as she joins us in the airport hanger. I’m sure
I turn the same shade o f John Deere green as that of the tiny
plane. But I rally when I realize the intention of Ron and Sue
Lowery is to joke away my nervousness. Soon I’ll ride shotgun
while Ron pilots the plane over hill and dale in Harrison.
He and his
son, Alan, an automobile mechanic, built Cloud Chaser.
“There are only 100 of these planes flying in the world,”
Ron says of the open cockpit, twin-engine machine. Designed originally
for National Geographic for photography over the African Congo,
the 1,054-pound plane uses premium unleaded automobile fuel. It
flies as slow as 38 miles an hour and as low as the terrain allows,
prompting one air traffic controller to query whether the plane
uses “pedal power.” Takeoffs and landings require
a mere 200 feet, and a rustic, opportune field can even serve
as a runway.
Ron sits at
the very nose of the open cockpit for balance. With no struts,
wings, or windows blocking his view, nothing comes between him,
the shot, and the wild blue yonder. “People think I’m
cheating death everyday,” says Ron of his open-air transportation,
“but I don’t think what I do is risky at all. I feel
safer in the plane than I do on the ground.”
On
the Road and in the Air
An aerial retracing of the Lewis and Clark trail is Ron’s
latest
project. The three-month journey from St. Louis, Missouri, to
the Pacific Ocean resulted in Chasing Lewis & Clark Across
America: A 21st Century Aviation Adventure, a book cowritten
with author and pilot Mary Walker.
Ron served
as the primary pilot, logging in 14,000 miles. The actual trail
consists of about 9,000 miles round-trip, but Ron repeated flight
paths, zeroing in on the best lighting and angles. Mary traveled
mostly by RV, interviewing locals for the book’s text.
Sue traversed
the highways and byways of the journey in another RV. Ryan, the
youngest of the Lowerys’ five adult children, accompanied
Sue, as did the family dog, Jack. A novice RV driver, Sue became
an expert after 12,000 miles. “I ended up falling in love
with it,” she says. Ron adds, “The way we operate,
if you need to do something, you do it. You just don’t say,
‘Well, I can’t do that.’”
Team rendezvous
points ranged from airports to fields. Up before dawn each day,
Ron would take off in Cloud Chaser to capture early morning light
for the images. “Then I would land the plane, tie it down,
and walk into the RV for breakfast,” he says. Sue, a graphic
artist, maintained a Web site in the RV that was equipped with
an Internet satellite dish, which outlined their daily progress.
“While
I would eat, the images were downloading,” Ron explains.
“Then we would do a preliminary edit.” Sometimes a
particular shot took days to obtain. “I do scouting up and
down the river before I decide when I am going to shoot,”
he says.
During harsh
daylight hours which are murderous for obtaining quality pictures,
they edited shots, conducted interviews, talked to the media and
did basic maintenance on the plane and RV.
During the golden glow of late afternoon, Ron returned to the
air for more photos.
Ron credits
a supberb team effort for the trip’s success. “There
was no way I could have done it by just getting in the plane and
camping out along the way,” he says.
A
Beautiful Book
“I wanted to show the beauty of the river in its natural
state, like Lewis and Clark saw it,” Ron says, “but
also how man’s artistic touch contributed to it.”
Even with a plethora of books on the subject, Chasing Lewis
& Clark stands out. “There are no national parks
along the route, so it hasn’t been photographed to death,”
says Sue. “It shows people how beautiful America is right
in
their own backyard.” The couple loves what readers tell
them: “I had no idea that our country looked like this.”
My
Own Moment of Truth
I count on Ron’s aviation experience as I suit up for the
plane ride. In seconds, we barrel down the runway, clearing ground
after only scant yards. Angelic music should accompany the crisp
vision before me. With no scratched, thick pane distorting the
view, the crystal-clear scene below—rolling green pastures,
and craggy hillsides— steals my breath.
“Want to take
the controls?” Ron asks. I can only see the back of his
head, but I know he’s grinning mischievously. I glance down
at the control stick. “I don’t think so,” I
reply, unwilling to admit my hands are too busy gripping the seat.
Yet when Ron asks if I’m ready to land, I reluctantly answer,
“I guess.” We soar toward the airport and start our
descent.
Seconds before
the wheels touch down, Ron maneuvers the plane up, up, and away
once again. I shriek in surprise then laugh uproariously, ridiculously
happy to return to this lovely, lofty world I never knew existed
except in the realm of dreams.
— Nancy Dorman-Hickson
To order Chasing
Lewis & Clark or for images from the photographer’s
other projects, visit www.ronlowery.com.
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