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BS: airplane window. baffled. please help

19 Feb 07 - 05:23 PM (#1972913)
Subject: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

I am writing a piece about unusual things to be seen from an airplane window. I've been told to "ask my friends" to describe things they saw that baffled them, things that provoked an "aha!" when they were explained.

The things seen can vary in glamour from a volcano to a sanitation plant. (I did try to cast a little disfavor on the sanitation plant.)
Nonetheless, all ideas are welcome. They do need to be in the United States, though.

The prospect of telephoning all the people I know, many of whom live frenetic lives, was daunting. Then I thought, "The Mudcat!" the greatest aggregation of intelligent people anywhere.

So please submit any thoughts you may have. I would appreciate it so much.

Now to send e-mails to friends and family....


19 Feb 07 - 05:30 PM (#1972921)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Morticia

I wonder why the blinds have to be up when you come in to land?


19 Feb 07 - 05:41 PM (#1972935)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Stilly River Sage

I usually do most of the explaining. I studied geology and geography and worked as a national park ranger in lots of areas around the U.S., and drove across many many times. Makes looking down at all of those familiar places pretty interesting. There have been some "aha!" moments for people who asked the questions, but I don't remember any particular stories at the moment.

The strangest thing I saw (but I knew what it was) was right out of one of the Narnia books (Magician's Nephew?). Flying over the Llano Estacado (Texas), west of Amarillo at night after heavy thunderstorms had passed. We were in a clear sky, full moon, and below were hundreds of depressions filled with water that were all reflecting that bright moon back up an us. It was a singular experience!

SRS


19 Feb 07 - 06:12 PM (#1972964)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Bee-dubya-ell

The first time I ever flew at night, I was a little perplexed about what all those brightly lit ovals all over the landscape were. Then it dawned on me that it was a Friday evening in October and that every high school in the US was playing football down there somewhere.


19 Feb 07 - 06:19 PM (#1972974)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: katlaughing

A round rainbow settled on top of the clouds which were below the plane. It was awesome!


19 Feb 07 - 06:24 PM (#1972984)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Ebbie

One of the first things I marveled about was the occasional dense and spiked plume that jutted well above the clouds that surrounded it. Oh, that and the feeling that the clouds are dense enough to cradle the airliner, if need be.


19 Feb 07 - 06:51 PM (#1973020)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Jim Dixon

While flying across the North Atlantic, en route from Minnesota to London, early in the morning, in the summer, I looked down and saw dozens of white flecks on the water. What were they? Icebergs? Fishing boats? Beluga whales? Whitecaps? They tended to be long and narrow, which favors whales or fishing boats. I imagine icebergs would be more irregular in shape. They were oriented every which way, not parallel to each other, as I would expect if they were whitecaps. Wouldn't whitecaps lie along the crest of a wave, and therefore run perpendicular to the prevailing wind? They seemed stable—they didn't form and disappear like clouds—and had no discernable motion. I couldn't judge how big they were—there was nothing to compare them to. I'm still wondering what they were.

Mountains tend to look flatter than I expect when viewed from above. Twice I have been fooled this way: Once when flying over the Appalachians, from Chicago to Newark, and once when flying over the Rockies from San Diego to Denver. Both times I looked down and thought, "These must be the foothills. I wonder when we'll come to the REAL mountains?" Then the land flattened out again, and I realized those must have BEEN the real mountains.


19 Feb 07 - 06:53 PM (#1973021)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: The Fooles Troupe

If the window was baffled, you would see nothing.


19 Feb 07 - 07:03 PM (#1973025)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Liz the Squeak

Like Katlaughing, seeing the circular rainbows that form on the clouds, with the eye of the sun in the centre... stunning!

My first flight was 27hrs in the air, London to Auckland, NZ, via Baltimore, L.A. and Tahiti. Didn't see much over the US because it was night and they made us keep the window blinds down so people could see the film. However, we chased the dawn across the skies coming in to Tahiti and landed on what can only be described as a pier. To land, we had to bank quite steeply around the island, which was nerve-wracking. One window full of big green mountain and the other full of bright blue sky... then we came into land and there was a sea horizon visible on each side!

My favourite ever sight though, seeing that golden orange rim around the world as the rest of the sky soars up into the deepest indigo and violet. No wonder man has always had a fascination with flight.

LTS


19 Feb 07 - 07:04 PM (#1973027)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: bobad

Not baffling but quite spectacular; on my first ever airplane flight, from Montreal to Miami, I got to see the space shuttle as it was ascending, great tongues of flame shooting from the boosters, just off our starboard side.


19 Feb 07 - 07:27 PM (#1973050)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Ebbie

The first flight to Anchorage Alaska was in the early morning. As the sun came up it spread a golden toasty sheen over the white topped mountains below us. Looked like oven-toasted meringue.


19 Feb 07 - 07:27 PM (#1973052)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Jim Dixon

I suppose it was many years ago, but I had an "aha" moment when I realized that clouds ALWAYS look white when viewed from above, or when viewed from a horizontal distance. Storm clouds only look black when you're underneath them.


19 Feb 07 - 07:42 PM (#1973075)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: SINSULL

On the way into Lhasa we flew through between the peaks of the Himalayas. Scary as all get out and magnificent.


19 Feb 07 - 07:59 PM (#1973093)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Alba

Wow Sinsull that sounds awesome!

For me it was my very first trip over to Boston from Galway made in early October. I looked out the window after being told we were now over the East Coast and all I could see was, what looked like, a carpet, a beautifully spun carpet of Red, Yellow, Gold and Orange. It took me a minute then I realized I was looking at Trees, Trees of all things, punctuated by White Church steeples...it was so very lovely. My first glimpse of a New England 'Fall' from the air!
Those colors still leave me in awe come Fall only I see them from the ground up now..8>)

Jude


19 Feb 07 - 08:08 PM (#1973109)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Little Hawk

The most baffling thing I ever saw was this ugly, weird-looking creature that was staring in the window at me from outside on the wing! What a fright! After awhile it went over and hung onto one of the engine nacelles for a bit and seemed to be fooling around with the equipment. Then the engine starting smoking and making loud noises! The plane had to make an emergency descent to 5,000 feet and put down at the nearest airport.

I was really bothered about that for years until I got a chance to talk to William Shatner about it.

He said quite offhandedly, "Oh, that was just a Gremlin. No big deal. I did a show about one of those one time. Not to worry. They're nasty little devils, but you don't run into them often. I take along a Hustler magazine on every flight now, and if a Gremlin looks in the window I just hold up the centerfold. It knocks him right off the wing, and I go back to drinking my rum and coke."


19 Feb 07 - 08:25 PM (#1973132)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Bert

I was arriving at Colorado Springs one evening and there was a thunder storm right over the airport. As we came in to land you could see the sunset underneath the storm clouds; it was absolutely fantastic.


19 Feb 07 - 08:35 PM (#1973139)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Helen

katlaughing,

That's the one I was going to mention, except that I also know what the phenomenon is called: the Brocken Bow or the Brocken Spectre. If you Google Brocken Spectre and click on the Images link above the search box you can see some pictures. A lovely older lady who used to come into the reference library where I worked told me about it. It's named after a mountain in Germany where the phenomenon occurs with your shadow at the centre.

I saw one from a small plane while flying between Newcastle & Sydney, Oz, which is a spectacular trip. It follows the coastline all the way down and then flys in over Sydney Harbour. One of the best bits is the large Hawkesbury River area halfway between the two cities. It has lots of smaller waterways and the hills are covered in forests, which I guess we all used to take for granted, but having flown over other areas of our state most of what used to be forests look like leather which has been scraped back, bare with brown grasses, and a few scraggly trees here and there.

Helen


19 Feb 07 - 10:26 PM (#1973207)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: kendall

I forget which flight it was, but I was looking out the window and saw a stream of something that looked like water streaming out of the starboard engine. I called the flight attendant, she looked and went right to the pilot. Suddenly, it stopped. I don't know what it was, but I do know that engines don't run on water.


19 Feb 07 - 11:15 PM (#1973237)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Bill D

Flying from Kansas to Wash DC on the evening of the 4th of July.....yep, looking DOWN on fireworks....mostly little ones, and going the wrong way to get the most time, but an amazing sight....little spurts of color out of the ground...then POP...


19 Feb 07 - 11:33 PM (#1973257)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: JohnInKansas

Somebody reported THIS, but I'm not sure I believe it.

"looked like water" coming from an engine could have been de-icing fluid. The pilot often has a switch to turn it on/off as needed, intended for when ascending/descending through "icing conditions." In this case it was probably turned on like a turn signal that keeps blinking 10 miles past the intersection.

John


20 Feb 07 - 12:45 AM (#1973292)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Little Hawk

This is one damned ugly gremlin, John! Wowee. Mine wasn't quite that bad.


20 Feb 07 - 05:15 AM (#1973409)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Dave Hanson

A dog with a yellow brick in it's mouth.

eric


20 Feb 07 - 06:02 AM (#1973438)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Keith A of Hertford

You can sometimes see a brighter area around the shadow of your plane overland.
This is caused by lack of shadow of grass, trees etc.


20 Feb 07 - 06:13 AM (#1973445)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Jack Campin

Brocken Spectres are much more dramatic on a mountain. I saw one once, on a narrow ridge in the Scottish Highlands looking down into a gully filled with cold mist. The sun cast my shadow onto the mist surrounded by concentric circles of rainbows and white light. When I held my arms out, their shadows expanded into sectors of darkness like the wings of an angel. I've never heard of any supernatural beliefs about them, but it's such a strange experience seeing one that there must be some.


20 Feb 07 - 08:15 AM (#1973535)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Helen

Jack Campin,

After looking at the pictures in the Google image search I think that people might have thought it was an angel with a rainbow halo.

Helen


20 Feb 07 - 09:23 AM (#1973599)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: GUEST, Grimmy

I remember looking down at all those tiny people far below. They looked just like ants. And then I realised they WERE ants - we hadn't taken off yet.


20 Feb 07 - 09:37 AM (#1973614)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Vixen

What Jim Dixon said...Reynaud and I saw those when we went to England from Boston in 2005, and we still don't know what they were.

Any ideas, anyone???

V


20 Feb 07 - 10:06 AM (#1973654)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Stilly River Sage

Maybe a search at NOAA might give you some answers? I have a busy morning or I'd take a look for you. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration.


20 Feb 07 - 10:10 AM (#1973661)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Alba

Here's a link to the NOAA
May help you get some answers Vixen.
Jude


20 Feb 07 - 12:15 PM (#1973805)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Ebbie

"Storm clouds only look black when you're underneath them." Jim Dixon

Nice metaphor, JD.


20 Feb 07 - 06:33 PM (#1974257)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

Thanks for the observations. Keep them coming, because I'll be back for more.

John, I too have my doubts about that giraffe. They're tall, but they're not that tall.

I have unusually sensitive hearing. One day, when I was a newbie to flying, I said to my husband "I don't understand how those people in front of us can stand that hissing." He shot into the air and shouted,

"You hear a hissing!?"

He summoned a stewardess, who slouched down the aisle chewing her gum. (Did I mention this was a cheap airline?) When we described the hissing, that kid was simply galvanized. She got the engineer. Turns out our window was in danger of coming out, and the hissing was the air jetting through the seal. We had to change seats, we landed, and we all got put on a different plane.

But don't let that distract you from thinking of baffling things you saw in the United States from an airplane.


20 Feb 07 - 07:28 PM (#1974333)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: The Fooles Troupe

"A dog with a yellow brick in it's mouth."

ROFL


20 Feb 07 - 07:55 PM (#1974368)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Bunnahabhain

Studying Geology takes much of the fun out of this, as it severely reduces the number of things you don't recognise.


20 Feb 07 - 08:17 PM (#1974391)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: katlaughing

Thanks for info, Helen.


20 Feb 07 - 10:43 PM (#1974491)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: GUEST

I flew to the northeast (and back) through Denver in early January. I hadn't flown that route before, I don't think, usually I've taken airlines that travel further south. On the flight back, the air was clear and the ground was snow-covered, and since most of my flights in the past 20 years have been in the summer, it was an entirely different experience looking down. The snow really highlighted the texture of the landscape.

The one feature it took me a long time to figure out (especially since I was forgetting that this route was further north than my usual routes) were the sandhills of Nebraska. Very, very strange.

~ Becky in Tucson


21 Feb 07 - 09:30 AM (#1974870)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Donuel

Perfect green circles stretching to the horizon in Kansas.
They irrigate with pipes on tires that revolve.


21 Feb 07 - 09:49 AM (#1974897)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Dazbo

Donuel, yes, I'd forgotten those circles but vividly remember the roads that seem to go on for ever in dead straigh lines.

Flying from Stansted to Ancona and flying over the straits of Dover and realising just how close England and France are (I of course know it is 21 miles give or take but from 30,000ft it didn't seem much at all)

Flying into Colorado Springs wondering where the mountains were and the plane suddenly banked to land and, almost like a magician's trick, the Rockies appeared out of nowhere.

Coming in to land at Washington National and the heart-stopping realisation that the plane wasn't actually moving and we were above the river (obviously we were still moving but it didn't seem like it).


21 Feb 07 - 10:13 AM (#1974929)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

Thanks for the additional ideas.

Dazbo, one of my favorite memories is approacing Denver from the south and viewing the Front Range down its length. Such power was involved in the making of that huge, knife-edge mass.

I've yet to find an explanation for it.

Becky, I'm off to Google Earth to look at the sandhills of Nebraska.

(In a few weeks I'll be going to Nebraska to see the sandhill cranes. It's a wonderful sight.)


21 Feb 07 - 03:37 PM (#1975208)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Homeless

Flying over Lake Michigan into Chicago in the winter it looked like someone had dropped a ream of copy paper in the lake, and the water was flat - just hundreds of equal sized white rectangles on a waveless surface. When we reached the shoreline and I saw that each "piece of paper" was larger than two houses put together I realized the lake looked smooth because the waves had been too small to see. I still don't know what the "paper" was. Ice? Why would it have all been so regular in shape and size?


21 Feb 07 - 04:11 PM (#1975232)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: KB in Iowa

I find it fascinating, from above, how much some clouds look like sand ripples in a stream.


21 Feb 07 - 05:12 PM (#1975291)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Donuel

There is a website for pilots that post their personal pictures of the sky featuring unusual contrails, other air traffic and super cloud formations. Their photos are really nice since the cockpit windows allow for some great scenes.


21 Feb 07 - 07:05 PM (#1975428)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: GUEST,MarkS

In 1969, on the return trip from Vietnam, the pilot came on and annunced that everybody should look out the left hand windows on the airplane.

"The land you see there is the State of Washington."

You could have heard a pin drop on that plane.


21 Feb 07 - 09:08 PM (#1975571)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Stilly River Sage

Thanks, Jude. I was flying through when I posted that.

Do you have a name for that site, Don? Sounds interesting.

I always enjoy the flights when the pilot takes the time to describe what it is that people are seeing out of the plane windows.

SRS


21 Feb 07 - 11:26 PM (#1975649)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

Thanks.

Homeless, I'm sure the things that looked like copy paper on Lake Michigan were sheets of ice. I suppose that the amount of each fragment which sticks out of the water is determined by their buoyance. Therefore, each piece has the same amount of ice sticking out. And all the pieces have been "massaged" by waves of the same size, which would tend to neaten the pile.

A photograph of that would definitely be an intriguing sight. Thanks!

I remember a train ride where we crossed the Mississippi on a bitterly cold day (-25 F). The ice sheets had been neatly arranged, pointed ends up,and densely packed. We were sharing a table with a little girl from California, and she exclaimed "Frozen waves! Neat!"


22 Feb 07 - 03:23 AM (#1975719)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Liz the Squeak

Alas, here in the south of the UK we don't have such large bodies of water that freeze - I'm fascinated by the shapes that icefloes and clouds form - isn't it amazing how our brains automatically see things in them, we can never just look at a cloud, it has to look like a dog, a dolphin, a mad axe murderer or our Uncle Joe... Even today, when the south east UK is covered by continuous cloud, I see a great grey duvet spread over us, with little frills of darker grey at the edges.

LTS


22 Feb 07 - 04:21 AM (#1975750)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Wordsmith

So far, the majority have been cool or nice sights, I can never forget flying out West(US) and seeing the results of strip mining...barren land where nothing grows now...looked like rings and rings of dead rock...a ghost mountain...and all I could see was greed.


22 Feb 07 - 09:54 AM (#1975972)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

It's bad, but nonetheless yours is a good suggestion, Wordsmith. Strip mining seen from the air would mystify some people and would be worthy of explanation. Thanks


22 Feb 07 - 11:35 AM (#1976066)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Stilly River Sage

I love flying over the desert southwest and looking at all of the cinder cones and lava floes. Monster blood in Navajo legend.


23 Feb 07 - 10:20 AM (#1976995)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

I know what you mean, SRS. I plan to use volcanoes near Phoenix (due south of Stanfield) in my project. There's also a grand flow near Grants, New Mexico.

There's lots of basalt right in Phoenix, but it's weathered to a pinkish-tan color and lacks the drama. At least, that's how it looks in photographs.

There is a program called Google Earth that shows features like this. I don't know how detailed the free program gets, but it's worth looking into.


23 Feb 07 - 01:07 PM (#1977136)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Bunnahabhain

Even the free programme (Google Earth) is an amazing toy tool, and more than detailed enough for most purposes.

It's very unlikely to be basalt if it's weathered to a pinkish tan colour. They tend to be dark in both intrusive and extrusive forms, and stay that way. A granite, or related silica rich rock is far more probable


23 Feb 07 - 04:51 PM (#1977342)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

Sounds right. One source said they were basalt, and I supposed they knew what they were talking about.

Interstate 17 coming into Phoenix from the the north is labelled the Black Canyon Highway (or Freeway or some such term.) On the web the outcrops do not look particularly dark. What's going on, I wonder.


23 Feb 07 - 05:59 PM (#1977378)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Scoville

THis is a little thing, but I always think that the neighborhoods here, where backyard pools are common, look very odd with all those little unnaturally blue blobs in them.


23 Feb 07 - 09:07 PM (#1977573)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Charley Noble

"Perfect green circles" in the Midwest was one of the intriguing sights I was also thinking of. Good catch, Donuel!

I always love the patterns of agricultural fields, so much like quilts, and ever changing with the season or the region.

Flyng over the Caribbean or the Great Barrier Reef in NE Australia you see the intense turquoise of the coral reefs shallows around the major islands, with the darker blue marking the deeper waters.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


24 Feb 07 - 06:54 AM (#1977778)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Bunnahabhain

If you follow I 17 north a bit, you get to Black canyon city, at the south western end of a river system with much darker rock in it than most of the surrounding area.

Based on the erosion patterns, and the spot height readings, I think I know why. The hills around are significantly higher than the area of Black canyon, and appear to be actively eroding, implying something quite soft.
The area bordering Black canyon appears fairly flat, with much less pronounced drainage patterns, implying it's reasonably hard, supported by the formation of typical mesa type cliffs. This would imply the Black rock is some softer material. The most likely kind of sequence to explain this is marine sediments. A quick look at web references shows Arizona did have a sequence of marine transgressions at about 300 ma

Top:
Poorly cemented ( ie softer) Sandstone
Well cemented ( ie harder) Sandstone
Shale ( organic matter rich mudstone)
Bottom.


It's amazing that we can get this kind of information so quickly and easily, and for free.


24 Feb 07 - 10:50 AM (#1977954)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: leeneia

Thanks, Bun. You're right about that. Thanks too for explanation about the Black Canyon.

Charley, your comment about coral reefs is a good one. I can find coral reefs off the Florida Keys, I bet.

Somebody asked me if there are irrigation pivots (which make the bold circles) in California. There aren't. It turns out that the pivots are used where groundwater is tapped for irrigation. In areas where streams bring water from mountains, the irrigation ditches are linear and fields are rectangular.


04 Jun 07 - 12:08 PM (#2068232)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: SINSULL

In the 70s I flew over the Grand Canyon and the pilot pointed out a forest fire. It was huge but from the plane, it looked like a candle had been snuffed.


04 Jun 07 - 01:21 PM (#2068308)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: InOBU

A friend of mine from Boston was visiting Spaw... brought some Boston baked beans and a - at the time, brand new item, a bic lighter. Catspaw was quite grateful. The friend started back for Boston, on Northwest Airlines Shortly after taking off, something trailing fire zipped past, and when they landed in Boston, he found Spaw had beat him to Boston by two hours...

lorcan


04 Jun 07 - 01:54 PM (#2068328)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: EBarnacle

YUP, That's Nawthwest, alright.

It's sorta like the one about the woman who went up to the conductor on the Trans-Siberian Railway and told him she was about to deliver a baby. He said "You should know better than to get on this train in that condition." Her reply: "I wasn't in that condition when I got on."

One of my favorite sights is New York's Finger Lakes. It is easy to imagine one of the Devil's hands digging them out as he is being dragged North.


04 Jun 07 - 02:35 PM (#2068357)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Greg B

What about things I've seen from airplanes with no windows?

Heck, you can even smell the hamburgers cooking at the airfield
where you're about to land for lunch.

That's the way I prefer to do my flying--- except that time
a bug got in me eye-hole. Didn't make for the most pleasant
landing I've ever done in my career.

(Being a pilot is all fun and games, 'til somebody loses an eye)

P.S.: To the question of why the shades must be up for
landing, they want you to be able to observe events outside
in the event that there is an accident. If there's smoke and
flames, you need to be able to see where they are to make a
decision about which way to run. For the same reason, they ask
you to remove your peril-sensitive sunglasses at such times.
My passengers' always go dead black the moment we leave the
ground in any case.


04 Jun 07 - 05:21 PM (#2068533)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: JohnInKansas

A puzzling phenomenon that I should have recalled when this thread started relates to the "pilots' name" for Seattle, WA.

Due to lots of recent buildup of residential areas in what should be unspoiled areas, lots of "neighborhood associations" have formed, with restrictive rules prohibiting the parking/storage of boats, trailers, and other "recreational items" where they are "visible from the street."

It obviously is quite important to those who create and manage these little empires that the residents should not appear, visibly, to be enjoying themselves in any way, but should spend all their time mowing lawns and re-painting houses to conceal the shoddy materials and workmanship used in most of the newer construction.

Almost uniquely, in Seattle and immediately adjacent towns, it has been deemed that covering your boat/RV with a blue tarp makes it invisible (i.e. not visible from the street), and permits keeping it on your own premises.

As result, the air approaches into Seattle present a vision of thousands of tiny patches of blue tarp, resulting in the pilots' jargon of "Blue Tarp City" for Seattle.

I'm unaware of any decisions regarding the relative invisibility of things under other colors of tarp, but it is apparent that blue is the color (for sunfade properties) of the cheapest and most plentifully available ugliness (which is permissible) to avoid anyone being offended by the visible presence of anything "recreational."

John


04 Jun 07 - 07:23 PM (#2068632)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: Grab

It's a strangely wonderful thing, but one of my best memories was takeoff in the rain. Spatters of raindrops on the window next to me. Then the plane picks up speed down the runway, and the droplets turn into a hundred horizontal streams across the window. And then the front wheel lifts off the ground, and all the streams simultaneously hang a left towards the top of the window.

On the weirdness side, the US and grid-system roads. Everywhere else, roads go from one somewhere to another somewhere. In the US, roads are a visible net of latitude and longitude, like they thought the land might escape and it needed to be held down. My first thought when I first looked out of the window over the States was that I'd arrived in Legoland, because Lego streets all come in those diddy squares, and that's the only place in Europe you'll see roads laid out like that, is on a Lego layout. Very strange.

Graham.


04 Jun 07 - 10:47 PM (#2068747)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: JohnInKansas

like they thought the land might escape and it needed to be held down

Not an entirely frivolous thought.

In most of the US, the land was surveyed and essentially "platted" before it became available for settlement, and an orderly predetermination of "lots" was quite helpful in letting people know just what land was theirs and what belonged to the next neighbor.

In order that the roads not cut across individual properties, they were laid out along the edges, resulting in fairly square grids at mostly one mile intervals. Half of a "quarter section" (1/2 mile long x 1/4 mile wide = 80 acres?) was a common "homestead" in many parts of the country, although in populated farm areas in my vicinity now a quarter section probably is a more commmon farmstead size. (And isn't really enough land to make a living from.)

On the east coast, Boston is most notorious for breaking from the pattern, as the "Commons" was reserved for livestock quite early, and as the town grew they simply paved the cowpaths, resulting in streets that go "wherever the cows did." Many of them, to people from more orderly parts of the country, seem to not go anywhere in particular; especially as they don't take you to anywhere a cow would now want to be.

Washington DC is another notable exception, as some mad architect decided that the roads should be circles connected by radii that all lead to "downtown." Later buildup has obscured the pattern somewhat, but it should still be recognizable from the air.

In less populous areas, where there isn't really all that much need for many local roads, the cowpath philosophy is still quite apparent, although there does still tend to be a tendency toward north/south vs east/west routes in most places. This may be partly due to following the ridges and rivers, as they do tend to be "oriented" to some extent by the lie of the land - and in some places it's a big lot of land.

John


04 Jun 07 - 11:39 PM (#2068771)
Subject: RE: BS: airplane window. baffled. please help
From: wysiwyg

I would guess that some municipalities require RVs to be covered (if they allow them at all) so that folks won't go trying to live in 'em and thereby have too many peeps on the street, with the anticipated sewer issues from dumping tanks. A lot of the "nicer" suburbs require that they be stored at sotarge facilities. Of course these regs are usually enforced somewhat selectively.

~S~