Former RCAF pilot still barrel-rolling at 90
CBC
It isn't often that someone turning 90 still has the chance to do what they love, but Ron Holden is still flying sky high, literally and figuratively.
The retired Royal Canadian Air Force lieutenant-colonel is still certified to fly as an instructor for both general flying instruction and aerobatics.
And though he retired in 1982, Holden — whose birthday is Wednesday — is still doing rolls and loops in the sky.
"It's just that I've done it all my life … and it's second nature to me," he said on Windsor Morning Wednesday.
"It's kind of like driving the car."
Holden flew the CF-104 Starfighter, nicknamed the widow maker, though he didn't necessarily agree with that title.
"Well, probably it's not the right thing, I don't think, but there were a lot of crashes of the airplane, probably because of the role," he said.
That role involved flying at high speeds at about 500 feet altitude.
"Of course, down in that environment, you're open to bad weather and hilly country and a lot of birds and that sort of thing, which the aircraft was a little bit susceptible to picking up birds at that height."
Stationed in Germany at the height of the Cold War, Holden said he was lucky to never have been in a situation where a nuclear strike was called upon.
"We had exercises, well, almost weekly to make sure that things worked well. But the we never got to a stage where we actually had to launch an airplane and be called back or anything like that, which is very fortunate," he said.
And dealing with life on the edge of total war can take a psychological toll.
"It certainly was something that made you think a bit because of course nuclear war was something that you didn't even want to think about, but we had to think about it continually," he said.
"And if you were actually launched it would mean that you're really faced with nuclear war and we all know that that is virtually the end of the world, as far as we were concerned at that time."
Intelligence regarding foreign interference sometimes didn't make it to the prime minister's desk in 2021 because Canada's spy agency and the prime minister's national security adviser didn't always see eye to eye on the nature of the threat, according to a recent report from one of Canada's intelligence watchdogs.