Category Archives: photography

American Heros Day – Boeing Museum of Flight

What a fantastic Day at Boeing’s Museum of Flight. It was American Heroes Air Show at the museum. A day dedicated to the men and women that keep America safe by protecting our borders, fighting crime, rescuing us when we are lost or in peril, and saving lives when immediate medical care is required.

The morning started out very slowly. With less than ideal weather over Boeing Field, but the people still arrived early (before 7:00 AM) to watch and photograph the helicopters as they arrived. All were scheduled to arrive between 7:30 and 10:00 AM. Breakwater Insurance was on hand to provide complementary coffee, hot chocolate and muffins for the small crowd that had arrived 3 hours before the museum opened, to watch these wonderful aircraft arrive. They remained outside, in the weather serving the crowd late into the morning. That was appreciated.

We’d heard one helicopter transit the airfield above the clouds, so there was a brief bit of excitement, but after 10 minutes, we didn’t hear it any longer, and it was gone. People didn’t give up though, and at 8:30 AM, the thrilling arrival of the first helicopter via air (A King-5 news helicopter arrived before hand, on a trailer…. much to the crowds disappointment!).

First to arrive was the US Coast Guard in their short-range rescue helicopter, the Aérospatiale HH-65A Dolphin.

USCG - Aérospatiale HH-65A 'Dolphin'

They made a quick approach down the main runway, and then landed just outside the tarmac gates for the museum.

USCG - Aérospatiale HH-65A 'Dolphin'
USCG - Aérospatiale HH-65A 'Dolphin'

Not more than 10 minutes later, the second USCG helicopter arrived to the field:

USCG - Sikorsky HH-60J 'Jayhawk'

To say that it arrived with a lot more flare than the other helicopters that morning, would not be an overstatement.

USCG - Sikorsky HH-60J 'Jayhawk'

Once it had established over, the leading blades were creating just the right disturbance in the air, to create these contrails. And I’m pretty sure they were NOT splaying chemicals or conducting other experiments upon us with the contrails (that’s a contrail folks, not one of those mythical chemtrails). Unfortunately, I did not get any photos with the contrail in shark focus. :/

USCG - Sikorsky HH-60J 'Jayhawk'

Not long after the HH-60J was shut down on the taxiway, a Eurocopter AS350 arrived, and was directed to the landing area.

LEO - Eurocopter AS 350 B2

By now it was 8:35 AM, and the private museum members only presentation of the newly restored HH-52 USCG helicopter in the museum was about to begin, so AJ and myself hurried into the museum for the 1 hour talk about the history of the HH-52 (the USCG website has a writeup about this dedication).

Rear Adm. Gary T. Blore, Commander of the 13th Coast Guard District and current Ancient Albatross gave an excellent presentation of the helicopter, and related his own stories flying these historical life saving machines for the USCG. It held even the attention of a 9 year old body for the entire hour. If you wonder what the designation “Ancient Albatross” means, in short, it means he is the oldest active duty aviator in the USCG at this time (he’s retiring this summer, and the title will be passed to the next eldest in the fleet).

USCG HH-52 Seaguard

Among the stories and facts relayed. We learned;

  • the HH-52 is credited with over 15,000 lives saved
  • it has a boat hull that allowed them to land on water to recover survivors (a technique that is no longer used, because it was really quite dangerous)
  • Adm. Blore had to ditch ad HH-52 on his first mission into the Atlantic, at night, due to bird strikes that disabled the engine and severely damaged the main rotors
  • that Boston Whalers seemed be involved in an awful lot of rescues
  • they had a very limited carry capacity, despite the size, due to single motor being down-rated for cost-cutting measures (re-using existing hardware for the transmissions), sometimes only being able to pull 2 survivors at a time out of the water
  • off-shore navigation before off-shore LORAN and GPS was via dead-reckoning and that is quite difficult. Often they arrived back to the coast with very little fuel and far from an airfield, so they would land on the beach and call for a fuel truck

During the talk, several more helicopters arrived to the field. One of which was this US NAVY Rescure Hawk:

US NAVY HH-60H Rescue Hawk

With the museum opening to the general public in less than 1/2 and hour, and the new arrivals to the static displays, we hustled outside to see take it all in.

One of the first birds out was the Airlift Northwest Agusta. I see this helio a couple of times per week, landing across the street, but I still love to see these thing fly.

While talking to the pilot, I learned some interesting things about this specific helio, such as it’s complex auto-pilot allows them to fly in IRF conditions with just a single pilot. In fact, it does not even have a control stick in the left front. The only person with any controls is the pilot. And like he said, everyone on board is counting on him to be healthy during the flight.

Airlift Northwest - Agusta 109A
Airlift Northwest - Agusta 109A

Just like it’s arrival, the departure of the Chinook was an event in and of itself. It’s a pretty big bird and there seems to be a lot of work the flight crew has to do, just to get it up and rolling. LOL. But it’s such a great work horse, and an amazing thing to see taking flight, with it’s big counter-rotating main blades. Just another bright moment that day.

US ARMY Chinook CH-47D

US ARMY Chinook CH-47D

One of the last birds out, was the DEA Eurocopter. The pilot took off with a standard departure to the south, but at the end of the field, kicked the rudder hard over, banked it high and came back down low over the flight line, before completing a standard northern departure. All of those helio pilots sure seemed to love their jobs!

LEO - Eurocopter AS 350 B2

What a great event at the Museum of Flight. Even the bad weather did not damping the activities on the flight line.

It was fantastic to meet and learn from these American Heros. The people out there on the front lines of national defense, law enforcement and search and rescue. It really makes me Proud to be an American.

iPhone Apping – 5 more Apps (3 completed, 2 underway)

A little peek at the apps I've been working on.
It’s been a really good and really bad few days of writing iPhone Apps based on a couple of books I’ve been reading. About 8 hours were burned slamming my head on the table, because the tutorial was just not *quite* clear enough on the exact actions suggested to accomplish a task.

It was not until I decided to just S-can it (for the 3rd time) and move onto the next task, and finally another after that, when I realized just exactly what the author really meant to say when wiring up a bunch of Objective-C code. Then I also found that I’d checked a checkbox (I have a newer SDK version with an option not shows in the texts) that really hosed me up by creating a TABLE based window when I wanted a NORMAL window. Lesson learned.

No matter what, I have deleted all the old ‘Hello World’ apps and have constructed 3 complete functioning aps that display, overlay and swap images. I picked a few of my favorites from recent work. The results are pretty good! It’s not *easy* to write iPhone apps, but with some planning, and not Boat in the Water shot-gun hacky-do programming.. it can be a pretty quick development cycle.

So the two Apps I intend to release for public consumption are now underway. Once is about 50% complete (I need to port some PERL code I have to Objective-C) and the other is a just a bare-bones framework and a bunch of scribbled notes. No matter.. progress has been made!

Fisherman’s Memorial Day in Seattle

Hey all (this is going to several people, so please excuse the somewhat general greeting),

Our director of sales at work called me Friday, and told me that him and his wife were going up to Seattle to do some things, and that I should tag along.  They we’re really specific, but I was free (no kids), and it was a nice sunny day.   Still recovering from being sick the last 3 weeks and not ready to get back on the bike, I took them up on their offer to pick me up at the ferry.  How much simpler could it be?

The day started off with a bang.  A trip to the doctor’s office for them to get flu shots.  Nope, not kidding.  But it was an interesting visit to one of those ‘concierge doctors’.  Sort of a private insurance that the well heeled like to use.   For about $80 a month they get a doctor they can call 24×7 (not just a service, but their actual doctor..)  and get advice.  It’s in interesting health care delivery model.  The one I went to was called  Qliance.  http://www.qliance.com/ Anyhow, the view for the skyscaper was worth the elevator ride, and it only too 5 minutes.

Back in the car, we fought our way (and I mean fight, this is Seattle I’m talking about) north to the Fisherman’s Terminal.  Which is where things go interesting.  Joel, the ever ‘working a deal’ sales guy worms his way into the parking lot where the crabers park their personal cars.  Which was very cool, because just a few feet away from us was this:  (were’ parked just off frame):

The Wizard - parked at Seattle's Fisherman's Terminal

Talk about timing.  They were 3 day late pulling out of port, and the entire crew was there working hard to get the boat ready to head up for King Crab fishing.  It was very cool.  The boat looks so much bigger, yet at the time, so much smaller, than it looks on TV.  One thing I’ll tell you that big ‘block’ they use to pull the crab pots up is ENORMOUS!  About twice the size it looks on video.  Now I really understand what a big deal it is for those guys to get clocked by it.
Captain Keith signing stuff and talking to fans next to his boat.
OK, so anyhow we managed to get a little bit of Keith’s time (he’s a *really* nice guy, not at all like he’s portrayed on TV, he hard a hard time excusing himself from us a few other people to get back to work.  Even after he finally went back on board, we talk him talking to other people from a port-hole on the stern of the boat.  They had a 9 day trip to Dutch Harbor a head of them.  Got to meet his brother Monty and a couple of the deck hands a well.  I’ve a lot more photos of the boat I’ll post up later.

We also saw this, the memorial plaque and small memorial shrine setup for Phil Harris:
Memoral brick for Captain Phil Harris

The next coolist thing to happen, was a Coasti MH-65 heli blasted by low overhead, cranked itself into a tight turn and then came back right over the Wizard.  You can see one of the guys waving out the door here.

USCG Helicopter fly-over
USCG Helicopter fly-over

Then we got a little demonstration of USCG at-sea heli rescue.  The pilot put the thing into a hover about 60′ feet off the water, and just off the edge of the dock.  Quite a crowd appeared!  Sorry the photo looks fuzzy, but we were being doused with water from the rotorwash.

USCG Helicopter overing over dock.
USCG Helicopter overing over dock.

USCG rescure swimmer about to exit aircraft.

It was really awesome to watch, close up, how the pilot kept the bird in such a tight hover.  It was a little windy yesterday.  Being that close to a heli in hover for 20 minutes was very cool.   Those MH-65 Dauphin helis are not that big!  You can see on the door that this one is stationed out at Port Angeles.

USCG rescue swimmer in the water.

While there, Rachael (Joel’s wife), tells us that Dan Akroyd is just a mile away at one of the stat liquor stores promoting his Crystal Head Vodka.  Into the car we hopped and blasted down to the Whole Foods store and there him and his entourage (and I mean entourage) were.   The line to get in the place wrapped around the building, but it seemed to go pretty quickly.

Dan posing with his signature Vodka - Crystal Head

That’s him posing for another person to take the picture.  After that he posed with my friend’s wife,  signed our bottles, stopped (no idea why) thanked me (for taking the picture?), shook my hand smiled and handed me my signed bottle.  He was taking the time to be friendly to everyone.  Some people we’re being real knucklheads making a lot of Ghost Busters jokes, getting him to sign Ghost Busters memorabilia, etc. etc. and he was cool to everyone.   That was a lot of fun.

After we bailed out of there, we headed back to the Fisherman’s Terminall.  Lucky for us the crowd around the Wizard was gone, they’d finished loading the last of the pots on the boat and the crew was relaxing a bit, and got to talk to them for a bit again.    We didn’t stay to watch it pull out (it was going to be a couple more hours).  Stopped at the Anthony’s Fish Bar in Belltown,  watched the cruise ships sail out and then headed to Joels.

At Joel’s, we smoked some cigars, make some cocktails with the Crystal Head (it’s goooooood!),  and capped the night off with a huge dinner at 13 Coins in SeaTac.   The ferry was going to be a really long wait so they just drove me the 70 miles home.   I got back just before midnight.

It would have been a long day for the kids, but I’d wished I’d had the chance to take them there, meet  Keith and Dan, and watch the Coasties rescue demonstration.   Oh, and the fresh seafood at the terminal..  that was pretty good too!.  I think they would have had a lot of fun.

I have 197 photos I took yesterday.  When I’ve culled the herd to a reasonable ‘best of breed’, I’ll be posting up higher-res versions.

Loud helicopter, light sleep and a camera

I can’t remember the last time one of the helicopters woke me up. This morning that streak was broken at 05:14.

I’m not sure why, but the typically quieter EC-135 helicopter woke me straight up out of a deep sleep. I’m sure it was a deep sleep since I was somewhere off in dream land, and suddenly finding myself looking at the helicopter’s spot light as it landed. Why, or why.. on my day off, did it wake me up at 5 AM?

All was not lost though. A project idea I’d been toying with for some time, could be tried. Some long time exposures of the helicopters arriving and departing the hospital.

Catching them in time to get landing shots, that’s going to take quite a bit of luck (they are fast, and often you can’t hear them until they are on final). However, grabbing some photos of take-offs only requires some patience. This time, it was almost an hour of poking around the house waiting for them to leave. But when they do, it’s all business. I typically have 2-3 minutes (maybe less) to get setup after they fire up the engines.

While waiting I tested out some exposures, macro and zoom shots, different white balance settings, ISO and apertures. When you have an hour to kill, this is not so hard.

First shots were to bracket the time, exposure and ISO settings:

Exposure and ISO settings
Time: 30 seconds
Aperture: f8.0
ISO: 100
Focal Length: 400mm
Night photo of AirLift Northwest EC-135 -- tail N139AM

Finally, at 6:00AM they fired up the engines and prepared to depart. Interior of the helicopter is light with bright blue light, which is visible in this photo, and also to the naked eye. I’d always thought that night aviation lighting was red, especially since blue light has a wavelength that is more difficult for the eye to focus upon. Perhaps there is a light barrier between the medical section and the cockpit.

Exposure and ISO settings
Time: 30 seconds
Aperture: f9.0
ISO: 100
Focal Length: 340mm
Night photo of AirLift Northwest EC-135 -- tail N139AM

This one I cropped at a different aspect ratio to provide a little more perspective. Sort of a ‘lone helicopter in the night’ sort of shot. Not really that ‘lonely’ looking on top of a brightly lit hospital. It’s a first set of shots to see what I can learn.

Exposure and ISO settings
Time: 30 seconds
Aperture: f22.0
ISO: 100
Focal Length: 100mm
Early morning departure -- N139AM

Finally, The Shot. Or really, the concept s shot I was going for. It did not turn out as I had expected, but I was still pleasantly surprised at the result. I opened the shutter right as the pilot pulled pitch, and the heli started to lift off. It remained open until well after it was out of frame. Typically they have on a spot light on during takeoff, but I did not see, nor the the camera capture one this time. I don’t know what it might have looked like (blown out photo, perhaps), if it had been on. Regardless, it’s close to what I was going for. If you put on a tin-foil hat and listen to Art Bell, you might think this is an alien landing. Use your imagination as you see fit.

Exposure and ISO settings
Time: 30 seconds
Aperture: f22.0
ISO: 100
Focal Length: 100mm
Night photo of AirLift Northwest EC-135 -- tail N139AM

Blue Angels and Others at SeaFair2010 (Saturday)

Granted, it’s been almost a week since the Blues flew at SeaFair 2010, but I do have a day job after all, and picking and processing photos is a time consuming affair. Regardless, here are some of the highlights from the fun on 7-Aug-2010 at the Museum of Flight in Seattle.

Weather was pretty iffy, but the Blues still few a program to the delight of thousands. Here are some of those photos:

Photos from SeaFair 2010

Between myself and my daughter, we took almost 2000 images at SeaFair 2010.

In this blog entry, I will be uploading a handful that really struck me as interesting or good. Here is the first, and so far, my favorite photo from the weekend.

Sunday 8-August-2010 Blue Angles over Boeing Field - Landing Flyover

I shot this photo on Sunday, as they were making the final airfield flyover, before landing.

My next favorite is this one, which my daughter shot with a 50mm lens, standing on a chair, as they made their final flyover, before landing. I think she has an eye for photography. I checked the rest of the shots in the set, and there were no rapid frame pics, she shot this single frame. I love the composition. Lighting was terrible on Saturday when she shot this, but it still worked!

Saturday 7-Aug-2010 - Blue Angels Flyover Break

Shot by my daughter on Saturday from the Museum of Flight Cafe, as the Blues returned to land.

Northern Lights Photography Mission – failure to success

Tonight, the Northern Lights were visible at latitudes low enough, to be seen in the Puget Sound.

Armed with my trusty Bogen carbon fiber tripod, my 17mm F/2.8 lens and a heart full of hope, I headed out to part of the county with a Northern facing beach. A few others were there to try to take in the spectical.

Sadly fires burning in Canada to the north, provided enough haze and smoke to obscure any chance of seeing this great sight. But that doesn’t mean I might not catch it on the camera (stranger things have happened).

Tonight, wasn’t one of them, BUT I did goof around with long exposures, lighting and moving objects.

This is what I captured:

Test shot - indoors
Red sky at night
Bright lights of oncoming traffic
Vehicle lights on the desolate road

Last shot. Reduced the time and waited for some departing traffic to pass me. A car came over the road in the opposing direction, but did not have it’s high-beams on, so shot was no totally washed out.

Vehicle lights on the desolate road

This has given me some ideas for other night photography projects. One I’d like to try is a set of long-exposure time lapse pics of the helicopters. So far, the opportunity has not yet presented itself.

More Night Photography – ALNW EC-135 EuroCopter

A few nights back, I had the opportunity to try my hand again, at some night photography of the helicopters.

This time the subject is an EC-135 EuroCopter Air Ambulance.

Photography at Harrison’s Hospital during lift-off.

AirLift Northwest EC-135
AirLift Northwest EC-135
AirLift Northwest EC-135
AirLift Northwest EC-135
AirLift Northwest EC-135
AirLift Northwest EC-135