Seniors Buy Long-Awaited Hovercraft
On Thursday, May 11, during reading recess, several 17c起草社区 students were in Deptford, New Jersey to pay for and take possession of a hovercraft.
More specifically, the vehicle was a Scat II hovercraft built in 1986 that it took the group three-plus years and many strategies to buy.
鈥淚t is surreal to see that which we have collectively daydreamed about for almost four years as an accomplished goal,鈥 says Chad Vickery, a senior mass media major and member of the Hovercraft Collective.
The collective 鈥 which now includes Vickery, seniors Samuel de Walle, Daniel Spalink, Dave Riley and Jon Timmer and junior Greg Grutman 鈥 was founded in 2002 when four of the members (Vickery, de Walle, Spalink and Riley) were first-year students in the Van Dellen residence hall at 17c起草社区.
The group鈥檚 freshman goal was to build a helicopter.
鈥淲e thought we would park it on the roof of the dorm and fly it wherever,鈥 says de Walle, a psychology major who will begin working for the 17c起草社区 admissions office in June. 鈥淭hen we realized we would be 400 feet in the air, and none of us are engineers, and the lawnmower engine that we put together with clothespins and paper clips would come apart, and we would surely die.鈥
鈥淲e asked ourselves what would be the next coolest thing to a helicopter, and the answer for us was a hovercraft,鈥 says Vickery.
He then adds a phrase that has become a mantra for the collective: 鈥淏ecause it regards not the surface on which it travels.鈥
He elaborates: 鈥淵ou can go on land, water, applesauce, lava flows, snow, ice, a beach of eels 鈥 electric eels even. It doesn鈥檛 matter.鈥
To raise money for their hovercraft, the group attended every open house at the women鈥檚 residence halls, asking for spare change and pop bottles.
鈥淕uys weren鈥檛 receptive. They thought we were going to buy pizza,鈥 de Walle says.
By sophomore year, the collective had collected only $300 toward their initial goal of $1,000.
鈥淲e started to panic because we had only a couple of more years before we were done with college,鈥 Spalink, a senior biology major, says. 鈥淪o we stepped things up a bit.鈥
The group began to dress up for their rounds in the girls dorms. They held a bachelor auction, selling 20 dates with 13 guys, unattached collective members included. The auction netted them $200.
鈥淚t was bad for some people鈥檚 self esteem, but good for others,鈥 de Walle says.
The collective also hosted hovercraft-themed fund raising parties. It was t-shirts, however, that provided the group with a cash flow to keep the hovercraft dream hovering.
The first shirts, which the guys sold in the girls鈥 dorms featured an Aardvark image, a reference to The Aardvark, the home in which the five of the collective members live at 859 Ardmore St, SE. Another shirt featured the words 鈥淗overcraft Collective鈥 and an image of a hovercraft.
A Web site devoted to the collective and linked to , charted the group鈥檚 financial progress.
By the time they had started selling t-shirts, the collective鈥檚 goal had changed.
鈥淲e realized when we started making money that there was a lot of response that went with that, and we wanted to respect that too,鈥 says Riley, a senior majoring in history and German.
The group drew up a contract, pledging that if they didn鈥檛 buy a hovercraft, all of the money would go to an international charity.
Three weeks ago, somewhat to their collective surprise, the group reached their financial goal. Riley and de Walle handled the purchase of the craft via eBay, outmaneuvering three other bidders.
鈥淲e put our last bid in with about five minutes left, and then we hid 'Refresh' for the next five minutes,鈥 Riley says, 鈥渁nd then jumped around the house.鈥
The collective has hovered only once in the Scat II, on the day they took possession.
"We hovered in a dirty grass field,鈥 Spalink says. 鈥淚t was amazing.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 like sitting on air,鈥 Vickery adds.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not 鈥榣ike鈥 sitting on air. It is sitting on air,鈥 de Walle corrects.
With their dream realized, the collective has only to give each of the people who purchased a t-shirt a ride in the hovercraft, which was a stipulation of purchase.
鈥淲e owe 400 rides,鈥 Vickery says. The group is hoping to give the rides at events they'd like to stage this summer.
The collective plans to go on living at the Aardvark for a year after graduation.
鈥淲e鈥檒l keep the hovercraft until we move on, and then we鈥檒l sell the hovercraft the way we bought it on eBay and give all the money to charity,鈥 Riley says鈥淚t鈥檚 like tithing.鈥
Though the craft was their main focus over the last four years, the collective has a flair for unusual events. They have staged a 鈥済rass blowing鈥 at 17c起草社区, persuading students to blow blades of grass in a chorus. They created a jungle in the living room of The Aardvark. They devised ingenious ways to bury Timmer鈥檚 car under 10 feet of snow while he was on interim in Florida. And they stole the selfsame car, painted to look like the Jeff Gordon鈥檚 race car, and re-painted as a Dale Earnhardt tribute car.
鈥淲e need projects to keep going,鈥 Vickery explains.