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#1
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Taking off at 4:30 am on a 4 hour flight with my teenage daughter on
our way to see her cousin's graduation ceremony. My girl had just broken up with a boy friend and was really depressed. She begged to go on this long trip, as she was really close to her cousin. They didn't get to see each other very often, as they attended college far apart. The weather was iffy. I decided to try the flight anyway as the ceiling and visibility were great at the departure airport and for the first 200 miles of the route. We could check the weather as we progressed and turn back if things didn't get better. Just as we reached cruising altitude I saw a shooting star screaming through the crystal clear pitch black air. I asked my kid if she'd seen it... trying to cheer her up, but she hadn't. She began looking, though. Then there was another streak, intensely bright and colored. Then more and more of them. A full fledged meteor shower had broken out and we had the best seat in the house. Here we were hanging in mid air with the most amazing performance going on around us. It was if the almighty had magnified and colored these flying jewels every color of the rainbow. Big ones, little ones, and some that seemed to stretch nearly from one horizon to the other. My daughter's whole outlook on life was changed in an instant. We watched the show in total silence with eyes and mouths wide open. When the show was over, she came out of her funk and later struck up a REAL conversation. Something too rare to behold between a teenage girl and her daddy. Her eyes sparkled like the meteors we had just observed. Although we'd always been close, I believe a stronger bond was formed between us because we had witnessed something so rare. An event that very, very few if any other people had experienced in the same manner. Then to top things off, calls to FSS had ground fog at our destination, but as we got closer daylight arrived and the fogbank was spotted from 50 miles away. Another call to FSS and they told us weather was clearing at nearby airports. The fog lifted and dissipated as we watched, while still clinging to lakes and ponds. It was surreal. We landed in CAVU conditions and made it to graduation on time. Oh yeah, on the way home we stopped at a grass strip on the edge of a lake with a good restaurant within walking distance. I'll never forget the trip. Neither will she. "EDR" wrote in message ... 1980's... Watching the string of landing lights of arriving aircraft east of Oshkosh stretching out over Lake Michigan. (Amusingly, followed by watching the arrivals try to find a parking spot in the dark with out flag-people.) |
#2
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Wow! Thanks for sharing this...
You should sell this story to Cessna... ![]() "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... Taking off at 4:30 am on a 4 hour flight with my teenage daughter on our way to see her cousin's graduation ceremony. My girl had just broken up with a boy friend and was really depressed. She begged to go on this long trip, as she was really close to her cousin. They didn't get to see each other very often, as they attended college far apart. The weather was iffy. I decided to try the flight anyway as the ceiling and visibility were great at the departure airport and for the first 200 miles of the route. We could check the weather as we progressed and turn back if things didn't get better. Just as we reached cruising altitude I saw a shooting star screaming through the crystal clear pitch black air. I asked my kid if she'd seen it... trying to cheer her up, but she hadn't. She began looking, though. Then there was another streak, intensely bright and colored. Then more and more of them. A full fledged meteor shower had broken out and we had the best seat in the house. Here we were hanging in mid air with the most amazing performance going on around us. It was if the almighty had magnified and colored these flying jewels every color of the rainbow. Big ones, little ones, and some that seemed to stretch nearly from one horizon to the other. My daughter's whole outlook on life was changed in an instant. We watched the show in total silence with eyes and mouths wide open. When the show was over, she came out of her funk and later struck up a REAL conversation. Something too rare to behold between a teenage girl and her daddy. Her eyes sparkled like the meteors we had just observed. Although we'd always been close, I believe a stronger bond was formed between us because we had witnessed something so rare. An event that very, very few if any other people had experienced in the same manner. Then to top things off, calls to FSS had ground fog at our destination, but as we got closer daylight arrived and the fogbank was spotted from 50 miles away. Another call to FSS and they told us weather was clearing at nearby airports. The fog lifted and dissipated as we watched, while still clinging to lakes and ponds. It was surreal. We landed in CAVU conditions and made it to graduation on time. Oh yeah, on the way home we stopped at a grass strip on the edge of a lake with a good restaurant within walking distance. I'll never forget the trip. Neither will she. "EDR" wrote in message ... 1980's... Watching the string of landing lights of arriving aircraft east of Oshkosh stretching out over Lake Michigan. (Amusingly, followed by watching the arrivals try to find a parking spot in the dark with out flag-people.) |
#3
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Well... I would, but Cessna wouldn't be happy about it 'cause we were
in our "manly" Piper Cherokee :) See, that's another reason to own a low wing airplane. Better view of the heavens! (He exits ducking and running)! 8437R "carlos" wrote in message ... Wow! Thanks for sharing this... You should sell this story to Cessna... ![]() "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... Taking off at 4:30 am on a 4 hour flight with my teenage daughter on our way to see her cousin's graduation ceremony. My girl had just broken up with a boy friend and was really depressed. She begged to go on this long trip, as she was really close to her cousin. They didn't get to see each other very often, as they attended college far apart. The weather was iffy. I decided to try the flight anyway as the ceiling and visibility were great at the departure airport and for the first 200 miles of the route. We could check the weather as we progressed and turn back if things didn't get better. Just as we reached cruising altitude I saw a shooting star screaming through the crystal clear pitch black air. I asked my kid if she'd seen it... trying to cheer her up, but she hadn't. She began looking, though. Then there was another streak, intensely bright and colored. Then more and more of them. A full fledged meteor shower had broken out and we had the best seat in the house. Here we were hanging in mid air with the most amazing performance going on around us. It was if the almighty had magnified and colored these flying jewels every color of the rainbow. Big ones, little ones, and some that seemed to stretch nearly from one horizon to the other. My daughter's whole outlook on life was changed in an instant. We watched the show in total silence with eyes and mouths wide open. When the show was over, she came out of her funk and later struck up a REAL conversation. Something too rare to behold between a teenage girl and her daddy. Her eyes sparkled like the meteors we had just observed. Although we'd always been close, I believe a stronger bond was formed between us because we had witnessed something so rare. An event that very, very few if any other people had experienced in the same manner. Then to top things off, calls to FSS had ground fog at our destination, but as we got closer daylight arrived and the fogbank was spotted from 50 miles away. Another call to FSS and they told us weather was clearing at nearby airports. The fog lifted and dissipated as we watched, while still clinging to lakes and ponds. It was surreal. We landed in CAVU conditions and made it to graduation on time. Oh yeah, on the way home we stopped at a grass strip on the edge of a lake with a good restaurant within walking distance. I'll never forget the trip. Neither will she. "EDR" wrote in message ... 1980's... Watching the string of landing lights of arriving aircraft east of Oshkosh stretching out over Lake Michigan. (Amusingly, followed by watching the arrivals try to find a parking spot in the dark with out flag-people.) |
#4
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ROFL...
Oops... We Cessna pilots believe everyone else like to look at the ground! BTW, your post got me thinking about the one quality of low-wingers I hadn't thought-off... unrestricted view of the heavens, clouds, etc... Now if I could just get the sunroof on my 206 STC'd...! LOL "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... Well... I would, but Cessna wouldn't be happy about it 'cause we were in our "manly" Piper Cherokee :) See, that's another reason to own a low wing airplane. Better view of the heavens! (He exits ducking and running)! 8437R "carlos" wrote in message ... Wow! Thanks for sharing this... You should sell this story to Cessna... ![]() |
#5
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carlos wrote:
Oops... We Cessna pilots believe everyone else like to look at the ground! BTW, your post got me thinking about the one quality of low-wingers I hadn't thought-off... unrestricted view of the heavens, clouds, etc... Only if they are Grumman's, Ercoupe's or similar canopy style aircraft. |
#6
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I find it quite surreal to fly just under some very small scattered puffy
clouds while tilting my head back and looking vertically upwards out of the canopy. The little clouds go zooming past at 100 knots just above my head. Paul "Jay Smith" wrote in message ... carlos wrote: Oops... We Cessna pilots believe everyone else like to look at the ground! BTW, your post got me thinking about the one quality of low-wingers I hadn't thought-off... unrestricted view of the heavens, clouds, etc... Only if they are Grumman's, Ercoupe's or similar canopy style aircraft. |
#7
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Taking my Dad flying for the first, and so far only, time was pretty cool.
But I think the best thing doesn't even relate to my flying. It's something I did when I was in the USAF stationed at RAF Mildenhall in England. A Florida travel agent named Dick D'Amato got our commander to sponsor a hangar dance for a group of about 150 8th and 9th AF vets and their families he was bringing over on a trip back in August 97. I was one of the project officers in charge of putting it together. I got the enviable job of working with several enthusiastic British 8th AF historians and groups and organizing displays of military vehicles, personal affects (including several original A2 jackets restored and displayed by the 100th Bomb Group museum) and, finally, to include fly-bys and static display of a T-6 Texan, P-51C (formerly Shangri-La, then Princess Elizabeth of the Fighter Collection) and the only flying B-17 in the UK, Sally B. The logisitcs were nearly impossible, the budget nil, and complications taxing to say the least. My favorite aviation reminiscence? Two. The first was when we gathered the vets from the Officer's Club in the military vehicles and brought them to the hangar (actually arrested them for being AWOL with local enthusiasts in period MP uniforms) - which was already filled with about 600 locals - who stood and gave them a roaring ovation when they walked into the hangar! The second was a half hour later when we gathered all the vets back into the hangar (they'd been wandering around looking at the displays outside) and to the East at about 2,000 feet could be seen the landing lights of Sally B as she descended for her fly by - only to be stolen from underneath as the Mustang screamed by from out of sight behind the hangar at full throttle and below rooftop height - he really hung it all out there! As Sally B made her fly past, there wasn't a dry eye on anyone. It was the personal stories that really tugged at my heartstrings: wives and children visiting England with Dad or Grandad for the first time since the war, getting to see, hear, and touch the things that he'd been talking about for 50 years, making them real; the vets being overwhelmed by emotion as they were applauded and piped into the dance, rather than just drifting in with everyone else; the vet who relived the loss of his boyhood innocence as he sat in the tailgunner's position in Sally B. That was the most worthwhile thing I did in 8 years in the USAF. Shawn "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... Well... I would, but Cessna wouldn't be happy about it 'cause we were in our "manly" Piper Cherokee :) See, that's another reason to own a low wing airplane. Better view of the heavens! (He exits ducking and running)! 8437R "carlos" wrote in message ... Wow! Thanks for sharing this... You should sell this story to Cessna... ![]() "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message ... Taking off at 4:30 am on a 4 hour flight with my teenage daughter on our way to see her cousin's graduation ceremony. My girl had just broken up with a boy friend and was really depressed. She begged to go on this long trip, as she was really close to her cousin. They didn't get to see each other very often, as they attended college far apart. The weather was iffy. I decided to try the flight anyway as the ceiling and visibility were great at the departure airport and for the first 200 miles of the route. We could check the weather as we progressed and turn back if things didn't get better. Just as we reached cruising altitude I saw a shooting star screaming through the crystal clear pitch black air. I asked my kid if she'd seen it... trying to cheer her up, but she hadn't. She began looking, though. Then there was another streak, intensely bright and colored. Then more and more of them. A full fledged meteor shower had broken out and we had the best seat in the house. Here we were hanging in mid air with the most amazing performance going on around us. It was if the almighty had magnified and colored these flying jewels every color of the rainbow. Big ones, little ones, and some that seemed to stretch nearly from one horizon to the other. My daughter's whole outlook on life was changed in an instant. We watched the show in total silence with eyes and mouths wide open. When the show was over, she came out of her funk and later struck up a REAL conversation. Something too rare to behold between a teenage girl and her daddy. Her eyes sparkled like the meteors we had just observed. Although we'd always been close, I believe a stronger bond was formed between us because we had witnessed something so rare. An event that very, very few if any other people had experienced in the same manner. Then to top things off, calls to FSS had ground fog at our destination, but as we got closer daylight arrived and the fogbank was spotted from 50 miles away. Another call to FSS and they told us weather was clearing at nearby airports. The fog lifted and dissipated as we watched, while still clinging to lakes and ponds. It was surreal. We landed in CAVU conditions and made it to graduation on time. Oh yeah, on the way home we stopped at a grass strip on the edge of a lake with a good restaurant within walking distance. I'll never forget the trip. Neither will she. "EDR" wrote in message ... 1980's... Watching the string of landing lights of arriving aircraft east of Oshkosh stretching out over Lake Michigan. (Amusingly, followed by watching the arrivals try to find a parking spot in the dark with out flag-people.) |
#8
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Taking a WWII Mosquito pilot flying for the first time in 50 years.
Paul "ShawnD2112" wrote in message ... A Florida travel agent named Dick D'Amato got our commander to sponsor a hangar dance for a group of about 150 8th and 9th AF vets and their families |
#9
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![]() "JJS" jschneider@REMOVE SOCKSpldi.net wrote in message I'll never forget the trip. Neither will she. I'll bet. Excellent read. -- Jim Fisher |
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