When "The Jetsons" introduced us to flying cars, we all assumed that we'd have one by the time the 21st century rolled around. You still can have one, but you'll need $1.25 million. And, while you're at it, you're also going to need both a driver's license and a pilot's license, as well as both car and airplane insurance.
Oh, and you'll need to learn a trick in order to land it.
Twin Cities airplane collector Greg Herrick has put his 1954 Taylor Aerocar up for sale. It's one of only five that are still operational, and three of them are in museums. Only this one and one other are in private hands. (That one also is for sale, with an asking price of $2.2 million.)
Herrick bought it in the 1990s when he was collecting planes that represented major turning points in technology or society.
"This is part of a different era," he said. "The vehicle -- I call it that because I'm not sure if it's a car or a plane -- represents a time when society believed that anything was possible. 'You want a flying car? Hey, we can make that happen.'"
He's selling the Aerocar, which is stored in the Golden Wings Museum's hangar at the Anoka County-Blaine Airport, because he wants to refocus his collection on planes from the 1920s and '30s. In fact, the money from the sale is earmarked for the restoration of a 1929 amphibious biplane.
The Aerocar, the creation of aeronautical engineer Molt Taylor, never went into production. All of the existing versions were prototypes. Herrick owns the second one Taylor made.
When it's used as a car, the wings and fuselage come off and are towed behind it on a trailer. While that brings to mind images of the cars tooling down Lake Street dragging their wings behind them, Herrick doesn't think that's what Taylor had in mind.