Well, if you didn't come you missed a really nice contest.
Alice Cotton-Royer came and flew it Old Time. It was nice to have her back with us. I flew Old Time mostly so I could put up a couple of flights with a Ringmaster for the Fly-A-Thon, but it was fun to go out there not caring how I'd do (I got last place! Oh boy!) and fly my very first Old Time pattern.
On the bottom-feeder front, Mark Winz and Jerry Olsen both put in very good flights in Intermediate and Beginner respectively -- they may have flown unopposed, but they earned their trophies none the less.
I moved up to Advanced so I don't count as "bottom feeder" any more -- I took 3rd, Mark Scarborough took 2nd, and Floyd Carter took 1st. In my opinion Floyd deserved a trophy simply for naming his airplane the "Thunder Geezer". The other Advanced flyers all did well, too.
(Mark and I took 2nd and 3rd in every event we competed in. I managed to edge past him in Profile, probably because he's flying a newly reassembled Jet Thingy (what do you call that, Mark?). He took 2nd in Classic and Advanced.)
The only unfortunate incidents for the whole contest were my fault, due to the Muffler Debacle mentioned above.
I have to admit that I didn't pay attention to who placed in Expert other than Howard. In the absence of Paul Walker, Howard did a pretty damned good job of putting up two "you gotta watch this" patterns. To the extent that I watched, all the other Expert fliers put up good flights as well.
One of the interesting things about the Salem meet is that we seem to get the most interested spectators -- the circle is right on a fairly well-traveled road, and the story I hear over and over again from spectators is either "I was driving by and I had to stop", or "I came by earlier and I had to get the kids and come back". It's cool that CL gets that positive exposure.
Results will be up on Flying Lines soon, I'm sure. There's already a nice picture of Mark Scarborough's Avenger posted:
http://flyinglines.org/.