Tag Archives: NAVY

Castle Air Museum – California

Wrapping up a bittersweet trip to Reno for the last of the Air Races, we made a stop in Atwater to visit Castle Air Museum. They have an extensive collection of aircraft at the location of former Castle Air Force Base.


Castle Air Museum – main collection

Castle Air Memorial Brick Park.

Museum Restoration Center


Castle Air Museum is located at 5050 Santa Fe Drive, Atwater, California, 95301

Fleet Week 2016 – San Francisco, CA Airshow photos (series 1)

Fleet Week is always one of (if not THE) best Air Show on the West Coast. A large aerobatic box over the San Francisco Bay means a lot more latitude with the types of maneuvers that can be performed.

Here are some of the highlight pics from yesterdays performances.
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TAGIT!
#wearefleetweek #USNAVY #NAVY #breitlingjetteam #blueangels #f22raptor #heritageflight #UnitedAirlines #PatriotsJetTeam #FleetWeekSF

Rare View – 7 US Carriers in one photo

You won’t see this any time soon, and possibly never again. 7 US Super Carriers in port together, in one photograph.

This is a stitch of 4 photos taken on 3-March-2012 of Naval Base Kitsap, showing 7 of the world’s largest warships in port at the same time.

On the left, are some of the last 4 diesel (oil) powered Super Carriers. On the right side of the image is the most unusual aspect of this photograph, 3 Nimitz class nuclear Super Carriers in port together, including the classes namesake ship, the USS Nimitz (CVN-68), just days prior to her re-locating to hew new home port of Everett Washington.

Ships are labeled in the photo, left to right.

  • CV-62 – USS Independence – The fifth USS Independence (CV/CVA-62) is a Forrestal-class aircraft carrier of the United States Navy. It was the fourth and final member of the Forrestal-class conventional-powered Supercarrier. It entered service in 1959, with much of its early years spent in the Mediterranean Fleet.
  • CV-63 – USS Kitty Hawk – formerly CVA-63, was the second naval ship named after Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, the site of the Wright brothers’ first powered airplane flight. Kitty Hawk was both the first and last active ship of her class, and the last conventionally-fuelled aircraft carrier in service with the US Navy.
  • CV-64 – USS Constellation – a Kitty Hawk-class supercarrier, was the third ship of the United States Navy to be named in honor of the “new constellation of stars” on the flag of the United States and the only naval vessel ever authorized to display red, white, and blue designation numbers.
  • CV-61 – USS Ranger – The seventh USS Ranger (CV/CVA-61) is one of four Forrestal-class supercarriers built for the US Navy in the 1950s. Commissioned in 1957, she served extensively in the Pacific, especially the Vietnam War, for which she earned 13 battle stars.
  • CVN-68 – USS Nimitz – is a supercarrier in the United States Navy, the lead ship of her class. She is one of the largest warships in the world. She was laid down, launched and commissioned as CVAN-68 but was redesignated CVN 68 (nuclear-powered multimission aircraft carrier) on 30 June 1975 as part of the fleet realignment of that year.
  • CVN-74 – USS John C. Stennis – is the seventh Nimitz-class nuclear-powered supercarrier in the United States Navy, named for Senator John C. Stennis of Mississippi. She was commissioned on 9 December 1995. Her home port is Bremerton, Washington.
  • CVN-76 – USS Ronald Reagan – is a Nimitz-class nuclear-powered supercarrier in the service of the United States Navy. The ninth ship of her class,[2] she is named in honor of former President Ronald Reagan, President of the United States from 1981 to 1989. Upon her christening in 2001, she was the first ship to be named for a former president still living at the time.

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.

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.

Congrats US NAVY – Rescue of Captain Phillips.

Congratulation to the US NAVY for the sucessful rescue of the hostage, Captain Phillips.  With 3 of the 4 pirates killed and the 4th in custody, it seems that it was a very successful operation.  News still seems to be streaming in and accounts vary slightly by source.

MSNBC – ‘Captain was in imminent danger’

MOMBASA, Kenya – U.S. Navy snipers opened fire and killed three pirates holding an American captain at gunpoint, delivering the skipper unharmed and ending a five-day high-seas hostage drama on Easter Sunday.

Reuters –  ‘U.S. NAVY rescues captain, kills Somali pirates.

MOGADISHU (Reuters) – The U.S. Navy shot dead three Somali pirates and rescued cargo ship captain Richard Phillips on Sunday from a lifeboat off the coast of Somalia where he was being held captive, ending a five-day standoff.

[…]

“The on-scene commander took it as the captain was in imminent danger and then made that decision (to kill the pirates) and he had the authorities to make that decision and he had seconds to make that decision.”

President Barack Obama granted the Pentagon’s request for standing authority to use appropriate force to save the life of the captain, Gortney said.

Washington Post — ‘U.S. Captain Rescued From Pirates by U.S. NAVY SEALs

Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, April 12, 2009; 6:39 PM

Mombasa, Kenya, April 12 — An American captain being held by Somali pirates was freed unharmed Sunday in an operation carried out by U.S. Navy SEALs, U.S. military officials said. Three of the pirates were killed and the fourth was captured.

The captain, Richard Phillips, who had been held in a lifeboat adrift in the Indian Ocean since Wednesday, was initially taken aboard the Norfolk, Va.-based guided missile destroyer USS Bainbridge. He was later flown to the USS Boxer, where he received medical attention and phoned his family. The operation took place at 7:19 p.m. local time, the Navy said.

Bottom line is that our new President exhibited some stones, ordered the rescue and let the NAVY do what it needed to do, to make that happen.   Credit is due to all in this situation, including the President.  Why it took 10 days to put the operation together, or for the order to be made, I have to wonder.  But, it’s still great news!

The first US flagged ship comendered in 200 years and it was quickly returend to crew control, the the pirated/terrorists where dispatched.  No money paid.  This is message to the rest of the panzy nations worldwide that help to make piracy a viable business model.   GET WITH THE PROGRAM!   KILL THEM, DON’T PAY THEM!

Murder of a hero’s dog.

9 days after it happened, the mainstream-media are finally picking up this story.

Marcus Luttrell (American hero and former Navy Seal), is awakened at 1:00AM when a group of young men murdered his recovery dog, with a single gunshot.  The thought of what those wastes of skin did to this hero is nauseating.

They recently released the 911 tapes (I’m looking for the links) of his chase of these people.  It turns out these dirtbags had been murdering dogs for quite some time in the area, and that night they made the mistake of kill this man’s dog.

After the punks where captured, one of them had that audacity to mouth off to Marcus about ‘coming back to get him’. The restraint Mr. Luttrell exhibited upon confronting the punks is, amazing.

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