Thanks for that video. It must have been taken not long before I made my first cruise aboard Midway to SEA in April 1971.
Obviously, none of the aircraft depicted were from our CVW-5 airwing of the time. As A4's has indicated, it looks like VX or Pax River aircraft working the deck. Our airwing was probably at Fallon at the time, getting ready for deployment.
As has been mentioned, the USS Midway was indeed difficult to land on. She became top-heavy after her 1966-1970 modernization which placed modern and much heavier Cat & Arresting gear, and increased her flight deck area from
2.82 to 4.02 acres – all this still on the same old WW-II hull.
In fact, during sea trials after its retrofit, she entered
a permanent port list after a hard starboard turn that she couldn't recover from. She went back into the yards so thousands of pounds of concrete could be put in the bilge for ballast to keep her upright. But she still was always squirrelly.
Even in relatively smooth seas she would set up an oscillation and the fantail would do a
frustrating "figure-eight". It was almost always a pitching deck, and a moving target. And with only 3 wires, and her 13-degree angle deck rather than the normal 10 degrees, only added to the difficulty. Nevertheless, she was still a great ship.
RE The Whale. On our second cruise, we incredibly had
a Whale land/trap gear-up, unintentionally! Incredible!
The guy remained flying until a couple of months later, when he landed one night far right of centerline. His A-3's right wing sliced through three of HC-7's parked SAR helicopter cockpits. (Fortunately, they were unmanned at the time, but the vital SAR mission was a casualty for a while.) Needless to say, he finally got sent home after that one.