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Survival II



 
 
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  #41  
Old June 11th 06, 10:44 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
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Default Survival II

In article ,
Big John wrote:

As an aside. When I bailed out in a snow storm in the arctic
(Greenland) I took the booklet included in my survival pack and tore
out the tropical instructions and used to start a small fire.


John... you cannot dangle one of your stories like that and leave us
hanging.
Tell us the particulars!
  #42  
Old June 12th 06, 03:22 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
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Default Survival II

John

Have told story before.

Was leading a flight of 3 T-33's to Iceland to replace three that were
due overhaul. Got to Sondrustrom (Greenland) and a gaggle of F-5's
were trying to land and we held for over an hour before being cleared
for approach. Had about 75 gallons which would have been plenty for a
straight in. Let down at max rate but still high on glide path so they
gave us a 360 to lose more height. This put us behind a mountain and
we lost radio contact. I went to Guard channel and was able to get
contact. As we came up on glide slope again they forgot I was on Guard
and tried to talk to me on descrete channel so flight overshot final
so was sent around. At that time I had 15 Gallons in a snow storm and
in a Fiord with high terrain on both sides that was snow covered so
couldn't see ground if wanted to.

Made decision to punch so climbed to altitude and punched. Was picked
up about 4 hours later by a Danish chopper. All four pilots survived
and birds were only valued at about $65,000 due to deprecation so not
a very expensive accident.

Lots of things I did right to survive so am thankful to be here today.

This is the short abbreviated version to give you the flavor.

Fly safe.

Big John
`````````````````````````````````````````````````` `````````````````````````

On Sun, 11 Jun 2006 21:44:34 GMT, john smith wrote:

In article ,
Big John wrote:

As an aside. When I bailed out in a snow storm in the arctic
(Greenland) I took the booklet included in my survival pack and tore
out the tropical instructions and used to start a small fire.


John... you cannot dangle one of your stories like that and leave us
hanging.
Tell us the particulars!


  #43  
Old June 12th 06, 04:03 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
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Posts: n/a
Default Survival II

In article ,
Big John wrote:

Have told story before.


Thanks Big John. I hadn't heard it before.
  #44  
Old July 3rd 06, 11:12 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Modelflyer
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Posts: 1
Default Survival II


"Rich S." wrote in message
. ..
"T o d d P a t t i s t" wrote in message
...
We always found we needed to use a pocket knife and
slightly sharpen the shelf for the cocked spring to hold
against. A third piece of wood (from another clothespin)
could be used like a ramrod to quickly cock the spring.


We would score the wood slightly to help the match ignite or glue a bit of
sandpaper to the wood. Remember, I'm in the Northwet, so the clothespin
was always damp.


Funny, we call them clothspegs here in Ireland, I suppose it's the same in
the UK.
--
..
..
Cheers,
Model Flyer
MS880B EI-BFR



Rich S.



  #45  
Old July 3rd 06, 08:30 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Montblack[_1_]
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Default Survival II

("Modelflyer" wrote)
Funny, we call them clothspegs here in Ireland, I suppose it's the same in
the UK.



In Minnesota we say "rubber binders" for "rubber bands."

It goes back to a group of teachers, from New England, who came to Minnesota
in the mid 1800's. They were from a region in New England (forget where)
that used the term "rubber binders" ...for "rubber bands". As far as author
Stuart Flexner could discover, these are the only two pockets of population,
in the country, where the majority of the people still say "rubber binders."

(From Wikipedia)
Stuart Berg Flexner (1928–90) was a lexicographer, editor and author, noted
for his books on the origins of American words and expressions, including [I
Hear America Talking] and[Listening to America]; as co-editor of the
[Dictionary of American Slang]; and as chief editor of the [Random House
Dictionary, Second Edition].

I Hear America Talking: An Illustrated Treasury of American Words and
Phrases (1976)

Listening to America: An Illustrated History of Words and Phrases from our
Lively and Splendid Past (1982)

At $2 (plus shipping) I think I'll order myself a hardcover copy - of each.
Mom has the books I leafed through ...25-30 years ago. I want my own copies.
:-)

This was a very good 8 Part series! Catch it if it comes around again.
http://imdb.com/title/tt0198245/
The Story of English (1986)


Montblack

 




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