

Josh's early
start as a rocketeer... (c. 1981)
My dad had flown
rockets on and off over the years. When I was
four he built the three-stage Estes Astron Farside and flew it with us
at a local
school in Saginaw, Michigan. The first Space Shuttle launch
was also that year, and that really got me hooked. For
most
of my childhood I wanted to be an astronaut. My
earliest rockets were built for me by my parents. I
enjoyed
all sorts of rockets, but scale models were always my favorites
(especially the Space Shuttle). Rocket launches for us
consisted of one or two kits to be flown once (maybe twice) at a local
field every once-in-a-while. Even my brother and sister had
their
own rockets on occassion, but I was the only hard-core rocketeer in the
family.
Joining the NAR

My rocketry
interest came and went in phases but never waned
completely. Several factors came into play late in my
elementary
school years to spark an especially intense interest in rockets, such
as reading G. Harry Stine's Handbook of Model Rocketry and discovering
a very old Astron Farside kit at a local hobby shop, among other
things. I finally joined the National
Association
of Rocketry
(NAR) in 1988. Not long after starting
high school I was privileged to meet international Scale Spacemodeler
Bob Biedron. He graciously let me
visit his
workshop on multiple occasions and showed me several advanced modeling
techniques. Later my freshman year I also got my first taste
of NAR competition and attended several group
launches with the Vikings NAR section near Richmond, Virginia.
The High
School Lull...A
Brief Spark...Then Another Lull...
The remainder of
my high school career I
was busy running track and cross country or helping out at
church and did not do any rocket building or flying. A year after
graduation I was
involved in a kids' Vacation Bible School (1995) that had a space
theme--I knew that we needed a rocket to launch for the kids, so I
bought an Astrocam. Unfortunately, we had no success with the
photos, but I was bitten again by the rocket bug. So later
that
summer, my friend Jeff and I flew the clustered and staged "Addicted 2 Jesus"
rocket (named
after a certain Christian song--kinda cheesy, I know, but
it
is a cool rocket). I began full time college classes the
following spring, humbling whatever fantastic spacemodeling plans I had
in mind at the time.
A
Family Hobby
A couple years
later I became heavily involved
playing drums at
church.
Jess and I started hanging out and finally were married in 2000, but I
was
too busy tinkering with electronic
drums to think about rockets. We
eventually visited a sport launch hosted by a local club, SEVRA,
and we
began flying almost every month and continued to do so even after Ben
and Jane were born. With both of them in tow we still manage to attend
at least a few launches every year with the Vikings Rocket
Society
near Richmond. We also occasionally attend the ECRM regional
meet
in Maryland, and every so often we even make it to a NARAM (national
meet).
Competition
Flying
Since
the spring of 2002, Jess and I both have entered models in NAR Sport
Scale
competition either individually or as a team.
In 2005 we began flying with Kevin Johnson as the Meatball
Rocketry Team (NAR Team 684). In 2008 we finally completed
the 1:59 scale Saturn I model,
flying to 1st place in Team Division Scale at NARAM-50.
After NARAM-50 we gained a new team member, Scott Branche, who should
prove to be an asset to our team's low-key, "let's just have some fun"
competition strategy.
Click here for the Meatball Rocketry Team Page
(link not active--page under construction).
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