View Full Version : Contrails
Kevin Dunlevy[_1_]
December 11th 06, 12:51 AM
I went for a walk before twilight yesterday morning. It was mild and clear, 
with wind from the south at about 10 and 24 degrees Fahrenheit. There was 
about a 2/3 moon high in the sky, and Orion and Pleiades had set.
I saw an airliner at cruise and thought I could see the landing light. Then 
I realized the light was behind instead of ahead of the aircraft. I thought 
that maybe at that altitude the sun was catching the contrail, although the 
rest of the sky was still dark. Finally, I realized that the moon was 
illuminating the contrail from above. Then I saw another airliner at cruise 
on an opposite course. It was really cool to see the contrails at night, 
illuminated by the moon. After I reversed course on my walk, I saw an 
airliner and its contrail change course over the Gopher VOR, and another 
airliner on a diverging course.
When I see aircraft from the ground, I often think the aircraft, pilot, crew 
and passengers are a force for life, pressing on against adversity toward 
their destination. KD
Christopher Campbell[_1_]
December 11th 06, 02:54 AM
On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 15:51:49 -0800, Kevin Dunlevy wrote
(in article >):
> I went for a walk before twilight yesterday morning. It was mild and clear, 
> with wind from the south at about 10 and 24 degrees Fahrenheit. There was 
> about a 2/3 moon high in the sky, and Orion and Pleiades had set.
> 
> I saw an airliner at cruise and thought I could see the landing light. Then 
> I realized the light was behind instead of ahead of the aircraft. I thought 
> that maybe at that altitude the sun was catching the contrail, although the 
> rest of the sky was still dark. Finally, I realized that the moon was 
> illuminating the contrail from above. Then I saw another airliner at cruise 
> on an opposite course. It was really cool to see the contrails at night, 
> illuminated by the moon. After I reversed course on my walk, I saw an 
> airliner and its contrail change course over the Gopher VOR, and another 
> airliner on a diverging course.
> 
> When I see aircraft from the ground, I often think the aircraft, pilot, crew 
> and passengers are a force for life, pressing on against adversity toward 
> their destination. KD
> 
> 
> 
You're a poetic sort, aren't you?
karl gruber[_1_]
December 11th 06, 04:05 AM
"Christopher Campbell" > wrote in message 
 e.com...
> On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 15:51:49 -0800, Kevin Dunlevy wrote
> (in article >):
>
>> I went for a walk before twilight yesterday morning. It was mild and 
>> clear,
>> with wind from the south at about 10 and 24 degrees Fahrenheit. There was
>> about a 2/3 moon high in the sky, and Orion and Pleiades had set.
>>
>> I saw an airliner at cruise and thought I could see the landing light. 
>> Then
>> I realized the light was behind instead of ahead of the aircraft. I 
>> thought
>> that maybe at that altitude the sun was catching the contrail, although 
>> the
>> rest of the sky was still dark. Finally, I realized that the moon was
>> illuminating the contrail from above. Then I saw another airliner at 
>> cruise
>> on an opposite course. It was really cool to see the contrails at night,
>> illuminated by the moon. After I reversed course on my walk, I saw an
>> airliner and its contrail change course over the Gopher VOR, and another
>> airliner on a diverging course.
>>
>> When I see aircraft from the ground, I often think the aircraft, pilot, 
>> crew
>> and passengers are a force for life, pressing on against adversity toward
>> their destination. KD
>>
>>
>>
>
> You're a poetic sort, aren't you?
He was really looking at a Chemtrail, and didn't know it!
Karl
"Curator" N185KG
>
Denny
December 11th 06, 01:43 PM
Yes, but was he wearing his gas mask?
denny
karl gruber wrote:
>
> He was really looking at a Chemtrail, and didn't know it!
> 
> Karl
> "Curator" N185KG
> >
Andrew Gideon
December 13th 06, 09:31 PM
On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 17:51:49 -0600, Kevin Dunlevy wrote:
> pressing on against adversity
> toward their destination.
I think this when looking down at road traffic (and don't miss the pun in
this sentence {8^).  It's a lot more fun (with far fewer adversaries) on
an airway than a roadway.
	- Andrew
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