![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Montblack wrote:
Mom was not too happy with us kids when we woke up our baby brother so he could (someday) say, "I saw the moon landing." He was 6 months old at the time g. Heh. I did the same with my 3 month old daughter. She now says she's glad I did. |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
" wrote in message
oups.com... Hey Jay - YMCA Camp in Wisconsin? Which one? I met my wife at one. You met your *wife* in a Y*M*CA camp? Uhhh... You wouldn't prehaps be from San Francisco, would you? snicker |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Not to disapoint you but the Apollo launch control down there is a
re-creation from equipment in the orginal firing rooms. When I was working there they moved all that gear to that spot from the real firing rooms which were redone to accomadate the shuttle firing rooms in the LCC. It is still pretty cool and that building was used to house simulators so that the crews could continue to practice up until launch day. I worked at KSC for the first seven shuttle missions and it was really neat getting to see that stuff up close and personal. I met a couple of astronauts and people who had worked on Apollo but I had a really surreal experience last November. I know work for a large telecom company and they had invited a speaker to come a talk to us. The secretary knowing of passion for space stuff and that I had worked there asked if I could drive the our guest speaker around and spend the afternoon with him to ensure he had all he needed, the speaker was Alan Bean for Apollo 12. It was a great afternoon and I got several hours of one on one time with him but the really surreal part was when I took him into our museum specifically to the display on Apollo gear that we had made. While we were looking at the gear he saw a transponder that was installed in an ALSAP experiment package. I said I was not sure what the ALSAP was but he knew, of course, and then said that the picture of the astronaut carrying the experiment package on the moon with eh item was him. It really made me feel strange to think that here was that guy standing right next to me. I got a nice picture of Capt. Bean and me plus he autographed a print of one of his paintings. A very cool day and my best day at work for that company in over 15 years. Scott -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Scott F. Migaldi, K9PO MI-150972 PP-ASEL-IA Are you a PADI Instructor or DM? Then join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/join ----------------------------------- Catch the wave! www.hamwave.com "I can accept that Bush won the election. What I have a hard time swallowing is that I live in a country where more than half the population is willfully ignorant, politically obstinate, religiously prejudiced, and embarrassingly gullible." ------------------------------------- "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news ![]() Have you ever been down to the cape and gone through the old launch control facility? When I was there it was completely in tact and they staged a launch. I don't know what they used for low frequency speakers but you thought you "were there". The whole place shook and there was hardly a dry eye in the place. Just got back from there two weeks ago. It was awesome! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hey Jay - YMCA Camp in Wisconsin? Which one? I met my wife at one.
Camp Anokojig, circa 1969. I don't recall seeing any girls there, quite frankly! ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Not to disapoint you but the Apollo launch control down there is a
re-creation from equipment in the orginal firing rooms. Yeah, they do mention that in the tour. The equipment is real, and original -- it's just all been moved into a different room. It was a great afternoon and I got several hours of one on one time with him but the really surreal part was when I took him into our museum specifically to the display on Apollo gear that we had made. While we were looking at the gear he saw a transponder that was installed in an ALSAP experiment package. I said I was not sure what the ALSAP was but he knew, of course, and then said that the picture of the astronaut carrying the experiment package on the moon with eh item was him. It really made me feel strange to think that here was that guy standing right next to me. That is so cool. Who would ever have thought, back in those heady days, that there would only be a handful of guys to ever land on the moon? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
Hey Jay - YMCA Camp in Wisconsin? Which one? I met my wife at one. Camp Anokojig, circa 1969. I don't recall seeing any girls there, quite frankly! If you're looking for adventure of a new and different kind, and you run across a girl scout who is similarly inclined, don't ne nervous, don't be worried, don't be scared -- be prepared! Tom Lehrer George Patterson Whosoever bloweth not his own horn, the same shall remain unblown. |
#57
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks, Jay. My wife would have been 3 y/o - not likey a Y-camp staff
:-) She was at Icaghowan, near Amery. |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George Patterson wrote:
If you're looking for adventure of a new and different kind, and you run across a girl scout who is similarly inclined, don't ne nervous, don't be worried, don't be scared -- be prepared! Tom Lehrer Har! Thanks, George. I don't want to admit the number of years that have elapsed since I last heard that ditty. Also, on the subject of Apollo stuff... there used to be a sort of museum at Florence, SC on the airport. Calling it a museum perhaps gives it more dignity than it deserves. It was really just a pile of interesting old junk. Included amongst the objects there were some things that looked like the consoles for the Apollo program. I think that "museum" isn't there any more, but I'm not sure. It was there ~15 years ago. Dave |
#59
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Also, on the subject of Apollo stuff... there used to be a sort of museum
at Florence, SC on the airport. Calling it a museum perhaps gives it more dignity than it deserves. It was really just a pile of interesting old junk. Included amongst the objects there were some things that looked like the consoles for the Apollo program. I think that "museum" isn't there any more, but I'm not sure. It was there ~15 years ago. I'm always amazed by how haphazard we are with our priceless history. A few years ago we randomly landed at an airfield near Springfield, IL, and were astounded to find a really cool museum of World War II "stuff". It was obviously someone's personal collection, and that "someone" was apparently dead, judging by the condition of the displays, and the general lack of maintenance (or even anyone in attendance). Here were all these priceless artifacts, untended, rotting away at some grass strip in Illinois... One fire, or even a casual vandal, and *poof* there goes a bunch of irreplaceable history. Another example: There is apparently no "Airmail Museum" in America. Anyone who knows the amazing history of the airmail pilots and planes must surely be astounded by this gaping hole in our aviation history, and I've often wondered at how this travesty has been allowed to happen. Perhaps it's because aviation is still so new, but in 500 years people will be surely be cursing us for so casually discarding much of the early legacy of flight. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Another example: There is apparently no "Airmail Museum" in America. Anyone who knows the amazing history of the airmail pilots and planes must surely be astounded by this gaping hole in our aviation history, and I've often wondered at how this travesty has been allowed to happen. Perhaps it's because aviation is still so new, but in 500 years people will be surely be cursing us for so casually discarding much of the early legacy of flight. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" I was fortunate to spend an afternoon with Hal Ruschenberg about 20 years ago. He was one of the 10 original Northwest pilots. They flew the mail and wore full leathers and a Colt 45. His airplane was a Rearwin Special and of the 10 pilots he was the only man to survive. He had a picture of the 10 pilots and pointed to each and told of their demise. Hal was a close friend of Benny Howard, who built the Howard DGA airplanes. He had several fantastic stories about the early days and of flight testing the Howard airplanes. Hal retired out of Boeing Stratocruisers and lived in Hamilton Montana. He had the flight manual to a Stratocruiser, it had less information in it than you'sd see in a Cherokee's manual. Hal didn't see any need to stop at stop signs while driving out to the Hamilton Airport to see his gorgeous DGA-11. He died a couple of months later. One never knows what history is lurking behind some old man sitting around the airport. Karl |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|