The Space Race~Part 4

17 Jun

A Slice of Life

Bill Lites

Bill Lites

 

The most amazing aviation museum I visited last year was the “Pima Air & Space Museum and Boneyard in Tucson, Arizona. The museum is amazing, with 150 beautifully restored hangered aircraft, and another 150 static displayed aircraft of all types in their 80 acre outdoor area. That’s also where the U. S. Government has 300 acres of discontinued aircraft of all types (the boneyard) in storage or waiting to be scrapped. What an amazing array of aircraft that is!

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What makes a lot of these airshows and museums I visit really fun and stand out, is that many of the museum docents dress in period costumes and display a variety of period planes, vehicles and equipment. At one museum I visited, and that really stands out in my memory, is the Fantasy of Flight museum in Polk City, FL. That’s where I met “Rosie the Riveter” & “Penelope the Wing Walker” who were tour guides there and showed me around portions of their museum. What a special treat that is for visitors at that museum!

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As a serendipity on one of my museum trips two years ago, I just happened to be in Albuquerque, NM during the week of their Annual Balloon Fest. Now if you have never attended a balloon fest or seen an IMAX movie of a balloon fest, I want to tell you, that is a spectacle to behold! Hundreds of colorful balloons of all shapes and sizes ascending into a usually beautiful clear blue sky at one time is absolutely spectacular! The Anderson-Abruzzo International Balloon Museum there in Albuquerque tells the history of how the balloon has evolved, from one of the first methods man used to venture into the sky, and over the centuries, to what the balloon hobby is today.

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I was reminded of the 1967 song “Up, Up and Away” which starts off with, “Would you like to ride in my beautiful balloon…” which DiVoran and I actually did with her folks during one of our many visits to see them in California. It was the occasion of father’s 60th birthday, and her brother invited us to join them for the celebration with a wonderful balloon ride. What a thrill that was! It was very quiet and peaceful.

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Since I can’t be on the road all the time, I stay close to the aviation community by being a volunteer tour guide at the Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum here in Titusville, FL.   Our small museum has 38 aircraft on display, 7 of which are flyable and 4 which are in one state or another of restoration, plus a vast array of military memorabilia. We even host our own Warbird Airshow every March, which brings a large variety of aircraft to our small TICO Airport & VAC Museum. Each airshow celebrates a different theme and usually includes at least one well-known flying demonstration team like the Thunderbirds or the Blue Angles.

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                                                            —–To Be Continued—–

Love Encounter

15 Jun

My Take

DiVoran Lites

Author, Poet and Artist

Big cat slides
Between child and fence
Small hand comes out to pet
Cat collapses in dry leaves
Tummy up for scratching

Cat rolling in grass

Minute Meditations~9

14 Jun

SUNDAY MEMORIES

Judy WillsJUDY

                                                 

CONNECTION…

How do you connect with people? If you are in a business, you probably have some sort of “plan” to connect with people who could be your customers. We see ads in the newspaper and on the TV all the time for businesses selling their particular product. We see ads looking for people to work with a specific company, or in a specific position.

I’ve heard of people who attend benefits or parties or some such event just so they can “network” the system, and benefit themselves or their company.

But what is your connection to the one and only true living God? Is it an Easter and Christmas connection? Is it a once-a-month connection? Or is it a genuine, life-sustaining, personal relationship with God?

My brother Bill wrote about this recently. Here are his thoughts:

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Our connection to God is, quite simply, the only way we can live this life with any purpose or satisfaction. It allows us to walk upright without staggering or tripping or falling down. There may be bumps in the road, but if we keep our eyes on that connection to God, He will keep us from falling flat on our faces. He will help us see the direction we need to take – to be His children.

We are blest, indeed.

The definition of true success. | Janet Perez Eckles

13 Jun

The definition of true success. | Janet Perez Eckles.

The Key to Happiness Is Not in Someone Else’s Pocket

12 Jun

From the Heart

Louise Gibson

author of Window Wonders

We can’t control all the circumstances in life,
But we can control how we react.
An attitude of optimism lightens the load.
That truly is a fact.

Negativity is heavy,
like a backpack we should remove.
When we work on our attitude,
our whole demeanor will improve.

There is something more to life
than what we can see.
Who we really are
Is our true identity

I’m so messy

11 Jun

On the Porch

Onisha Ellis

I'm a winner

I need to just come out and say this. I… am…messy. I have been a messy from my earliest memories of childhood playing with sweet Ruthie who had bouncy white blonde curls and never got her hands dirty, while we played in the dirt.

Even today, if you are brave enough to have lunch or dinner with me, be prepared to watch food fall from my fork and onto my clothes. I just can’t help it. Another fun place to be near me is in the kitchen. I can’t seem to cook without making the kitchen look like a FEMA claim. The floor get so littered I keep this handy battery powered broom to scoop up the debris. A disclaimer here, in case I bring a covered dish to your house, I am messy in the kitchen but I make sure that everything starts out clean and as germ free as I can make it.

I have struggled with this in my housewifely skills as well. Clutter, clutter everywhere. If anyone can tell me how to keep a house with no “secret” sitting room look permanently tidy, please share your wisdom! I am to the point where I am tired of losing the clutter battle and ready to wave the white flag of surrender.

As I finished typing the previous paragraph, Jeremiah 31:3 was running through my brain.

God told them, “I’ve never quit loving you and never will.

    Expect love, love, and more love!

 That is The Message version. I know being messy doesn’t equate to being brought out of the wilderness as the verse is referring to, but it delights my heart anyway. And to add a divine touch, as I looked out the upper window in my messy living room, I saw a beautiful, brilliant red cardinal on a tree limb; more magnificent than any I have seen in my yard.

The Space Race~Part 3

10 Jun

A Slice of Life

Bill Lites

Bill Small Red Plane

 

 

When that program was over in 1979, I was laid off and lucky enough to get a job with MacDonald Douglas’ (MDAC) Space Operations, who was processing and launching Delta series 3914 vehicles to place communication satellites in orbit for NASA and various U.S. Government organizations from complex 17A/B there on Cape Canaveral. This job required quite a bit of travel to Vandenberg AFB, CA where the U.S. Air Force was using the same Delta series 3914 vehicle to place their own satellites in a different orbit.

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In 1981 Lockheed Missiles & Space Co. (LMSC) called me back to Complex 46 on Cape Canaveral, to work on the U.S. Navy’s new Trident II submarine launched ICBM. This program was similar to the Trident I program in that it consisted of the assembling, testing and launching of 21 development missiles from a flat-pad, to qualify that missile for submarine launch operations and eventual duty in the Navy’s new Ohio class nuclear submarine fleet for which it was originally designed.

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When that program was completed, I remained a few years to help with the facility transition from a launch operations facility to what was called a Fleet Certification Facility. Then in 1989, rather than being laid off again, I transferred to the Lockheed Space Operations Co. (LSOC) at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC). By that time NASA’s Space Shuttle Launch & Recovery Operations had recovered from the 1986 Challenger accident, and launches were again on a fast track.

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One of my first assignments for LSOC, away from my KSC office, was in 1990 to observe and coordinate several Space Shuttle Drag Chute deployment system tests being conducted at Edwards AFB, CA. NASA’ B-52 (52-0008) was used for the initial tests, and it was quite a site for me to see, and quite a challenge for the pilots, to land that huge aircraft at the 160-230 mph speeds required to simulate the Shuttle landing speeds. NASA eventually added the drag chute system as part of the Shuttle landing system in 1992 on STS-49 and all subsequent orbiters, to help protect the orbiter’s brakes and tires during landings at the KSC runway.

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After I retired in 1996, my interest continued to be centered around aviation and I took up flying R/C Model airplanes, as a hobby, along with many of my friends. In addition to flying R/C Model Airplanes, around 2010, I started a bucket list of various aviation museums across the country I wanted to visit. Now I try to plan a two-week museum trip to some area of the country about every six months, one trip in the spring and one again in the fall.

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I usually fly to a conveniently located airport, rent a car and use the road-trip to see as many museums and airshows as possible, on the planned route, in the time allotted. My main interest is, off course, visiting aviation museums, but usually includes automobile museums, train museums, and maritime museums alone the way. One of my most exciting aviation airshows I attended last year was in Texas to see “FIFI” (the only air worthy WWII B-29 Flying Fortress in the world). What a beautiful war bird that is. The hair on the back of my neck stood up and I got goose bumps when they started up those four huge improved Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone engines. What a thrill that was for me!

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                                                            —–To Be Continued—–

Lizard Revenge

8 Jun

My Take

DiVoran Lites

Author, Poet and Artist

Cat catches lizard.

Lizard catches cat

Green anole

Fur in mouth!

Green anole

Minute Mediatations~8

7 Jun

SUNDAY MEMORIES

Judy Wills

JUDY

                                              

REST

What gives you the most rest in your life? Is it just a good night’s sleep?

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Is it vegging in front of the TV after work?

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Is it sleeping in that lawn chair after a hard day’s work?

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Is it doing something other than work?

Fred and I have often agreed that, doing something different from your normal work day is a type of rest for your body and mind.

When I was working for a company in Virginia, one of my six (count them….SIX) bosses was a young man, very skilled in finance. It was a small company, and he was tasked to do a lot of things for the company. In his office, directly across the room from his desk, was a very large picture of a mountain scene, complete with snow, ski lift, and a bunch of skiers swooping down the mountain side. Snow skiing was his passion. I understood that, in a very stressful day, he had only to look at that picture for a few minutes, visualize himself in that picture-setting, and have a moment of rest.

Have you ever “rested” in the Lord? Have you ever just let yourself know that God is in complete control of whatever situation you find yourself in, and sit back, relax, and REST in God’s capable hands? WOW! Talk about rest!! That’s the ultimate.

My brother, Bill, wrote about this one time. Here’s what he said:

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I’ve written about God’s perfect timing before, and it still stands. It’s when we can allow God to have complete control of our lives that we experience true rest. The peace that comes with that rest is the best and most refreshing we will ever have. And if we wait upon the Lord, we will see that, indeed, His timing is perfect…and so is our REST in Him.

I am grateful.

Three promises for you to conquer the fear of bad news. | Janet Perez Eckles

6 Jun

Three promises for you to conquer the fear of bad news. | Janet Perez Eckles.