Justin Turco
03-18-2013, 10:11 AM
74347435
I just wanted to remember an old friend who loved to sugar. Mitch Spencer. Mitch made the attached label. If you look closely you will see an airplane tail poking out of the barn in this attachment. Airplanes were Mitch's other love. I knew him from the airport and let me tell you...he was quite a guy. When not sugaring, he worked on restoring his Stearman. Which had been a WW-2 trainer for the Tuskeegee Airman. He also owned a T6 which was another really neat aircraft. It said a lot to me about Mitch when one day he showed me a buffalo head nickle that he had polished up. The smile on his face and sparkle in his eye carried me through the rest of the day. On another occasion he showed up with his old ford taurus (the one on which the hood served as his workbench and was therefore completely caved in.) and in the back he had a box of baby lambs. One of them had escaped the box and made quite a mess of the rear seat. Mitch referred to everybody at the airport as "Old Stick". I really liked being called that, and no-one has ever called me "Old Stick" before or since. He was the type of guy who made you feel like you were a good friend. Like you were "in". And in spite of the grease on his hands that you might have noticed on first meeting Mitch, you soon realized that you wanted to be part of the world that he lived in. The last time I saw him he was upstairs in the airport terminal playing his piano. When I came back that night the terminal was quiet and dark except for Mitch and his piano. He was still there. I regret not listening to the prompting of my heart to go up and sit with him for a while. Only a few weeks later Mitch was in Texas to bring home a radial engine (very big and quite heavy) when his loaded truck crashed and he was killed. I just want you to know that there was a man named Mitch Spencer from Pawlet, Vermont who loved to sugar.
When I came across this label it reminded me how I considered him to be a friend and that I still miss him. You surely would have liked him too.
Justin Turco
I just wanted to remember an old friend who loved to sugar. Mitch Spencer. Mitch made the attached label. If you look closely you will see an airplane tail poking out of the barn in this attachment. Airplanes were Mitch's other love. I knew him from the airport and let me tell you...he was quite a guy. When not sugaring, he worked on restoring his Stearman. Which had been a WW-2 trainer for the Tuskeegee Airman. He also owned a T6 which was another really neat aircraft. It said a lot to me about Mitch when one day he showed me a buffalo head nickle that he had polished up. The smile on his face and sparkle in his eye carried me through the rest of the day. On another occasion he showed up with his old ford taurus (the one on which the hood served as his workbench and was therefore completely caved in.) and in the back he had a box of baby lambs. One of them had escaped the box and made quite a mess of the rear seat. Mitch referred to everybody at the airport as "Old Stick". I really liked being called that, and no-one has ever called me "Old Stick" before or since. He was the type of guy who made you feel like you were a good friend. Like you were "in". And in spite of the grease on his hands that you might have noticed on first meeting Mitch, you soon realized that you wanted to be part of the world that he lived in. The last time I saw him he was upstairs in the airport terminal playing his piano. When I came back that night the terminal was quiet and dark except for Mitch and his piano. He was still there. I regret not listening to the prompting of my heart to go up and sit with him for a while. Only a few weeks later Mitch was in Texas to bring home a radial engine (very big and quite heavy) when his loaded truck crashed and he was killed. I just want you to know that there was a man named Mitch Spencer from Pawlet, Vermont who loved to sugar.
When I came across this label it reminded me how I considered him to be a friend and that I still miss him. You surely would have liked him too.
Justin Turco