My wife wanted to go to see Lourdes and who am I to deny that? Well, as long as we could make a quick stop at Tarbes-Lourdes. And so we drove the 1,5 hours to the airport and what was planned to be a quick stop ended up being an almost 1,5 hour session. Luckily the wife and kids were patient.
Anyway, this was my third visit in three years to the airport and every time they seem to reshuffle and reposition the aircraft at the airport. Enabling sometimes new opportunities to photograph aircraft that were not able during a previous visit. For the second time in a row, the weather wasn’t sunny but that prevented backlight.
With purpose I chose to visit the airport in the weekend, limiting issues with people trying to send you away. Roadworks are being conducted near the Tarmac hangar, enabling some new possibilities to photograph aircraft and you’re really close here to them, only divided by a small and flimsy fence. You need a very wide lens if you want to fit the aircraft, like 10mm.
Anyway, we began the tour at the road construction site, near the railway track and from there the following was photographed:
1. This former Air France A380 F-HPJE is now owned by the Dr. Peters Group, a lessor and registered in Malta as 9H-AIY. There’s no attempt to scrap this one (yet):
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2. Next to the Air France was this Azur Air B777-300ER VQ-BZB. This aircraft was supposed to be delivered to the Russian carrier in February, but the sanctions scrapped this plan and the plane was flown to Tarbes-Lourdes on 26 February. While I was there, mechanics were working on the plane and it had its APU running:
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3. From below the Azur, I could manage a better shot than I managed previously of this Airbus A340-300 F-WWAI, which was in use by Airbus as a flying testlab:
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4. This Wamos Air A330-200 is now registered officially as OE-IBG by CAMO Solutions. It’s the former EC-LNH and has been at Tarbes-Lourdes since November 2021. It has no registration applied:
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5. The end of the line for this A330-200. This aircraft is registered EI-EWH and owned by lessor Pembroke. It was supposed to go to National in 2019 but never taken-up. It has now moved to the scrapping corner:
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6. Being parted out is this former easyJet A319. It’s now registered OE-ITY by lessor AerCap but you might now it better as G-EZMK or HB-JZM:
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7. A shot of the ramp from the roadwork construction site:
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8. A flying airliner at Tarbes-Lourdes was something I never experienced but today was the day in the form of this Volotea A319 EC-MUY departing for a scheduled flight to Naples:
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9. Hainan A350-900 B-30DM again shows how close you are to the fence. A 10mm shot with the wing almost over my head:
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10. We moved positions to the other side of the hangar where the corn field was now mowed, enabling a view on that side of the apron again. Unfortunately, this Etihad A380 A6-API was blocking most of the view:
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11. Next to the Etihad was this former Avianca A321 N696AV:
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12. And left of the Etihad was this former Turkish A330-300 TC-LOL, now registered as OE-LDJ by ICBC Leasing:
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13. And behind the Etihad I was able to grab this shot of A320 VQ-BCY of Ural Airlines:
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14. Then we drove to the other side of the airport (the terminal side), where I first photographed this A340-300 9H-ACY of South African, which is the former ZS-SXB:
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15. There were three Mango B737-800s present at Tarbes-Lourdes, one with a South African registration and two with a US one, including this N259GE:
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16. Also very convenient is that they moved the two Air Côte d’Ivoire A319s to this side, close to the fence. During my previous visits I wasn’t able to photograph them. Seen here is EI-GWK:
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17. And I’m ending my set with this former Thai A330-300, now registered as 2-MAFS by Orix Aviation and was previously the HS-TBC:
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Hope you enjoyed the report! You can see a few more pictures here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/lifeliner ... 245680426/
Cheers!
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