Showing posts with label plane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plane. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2016

A wet, cold, windy welcome home

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The easyJet small-ish jet left Geneva promptly at 7:05 am while it was still dark.  A crescent moon hung in the sky as it gradually got lighter and lighter.


Snow on the Swiss Alps made the mountains visible even in the semi-darkness of pre-dawn.  


The pilot was happy to announce that with our strong tailwind the flight would take only 3 hours 40 minutes, but to expect some turbulence.  


Just before reaching the eastern end of the Mediterranean, our clear blue skies got full of clouds, and snowflakes rushed past my window. 



The pilot said Ben Gurion airport was experiencing severe weather and we would have to "hold" over the sea until a landing was possible.  
We flew slow and low over the water for some 40 minutes, just drehing around in that holding pattern. 
Finally the Israel coastline appeared and we went in on an unusual route I've never seen before.


The landing, thank God, was fine and everyone applauded.  
There were big puddles of water everywhere.  
When we walked out into the Arrivals Hall a tall crane was inside, and two men were fixing the ceiling panels.   
All it takes is a big rain (usually the first rain) to flood and paralyze this country. 
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Saturday, November 5, 2016

Dina crossing the Alps!

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Goodbye for a little while, dear coastline of Israel!


Thursday afternoon we flew over the Mediterranean and a huge pillar of cloud appeared.


Soon after flying over Venice we  were over the stupendous Alps!


Cruising at 38,000 feet, we had ice crystals on the outside of the windows.


The meandering river was already in Switzerland.


Dam! A big dam on the river.
And in minutes we were landing in Geneva.

More tomorrow about where I am volunteering.
(Linking to SkyWatch Friday, of course!)
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Monday, February 8, 2016

Remembering Hong Kong on Chinese New Year Day

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Happy Year of the Monkey!
In honor of Chinese New Year today,  I'm pulling up the only photos I have of China and remembering a pleasant 6-hour wait in Hong Kong Airport last August.
After a 12-hour flight from Tel Aviv, the coffee was a necessity and the young people making it were lively and friendly.


Plenty of planes of many colors to watch on the busy tarmac.


Signs on the moving walkway ask you to pay attention to children and old folks while walking, and not have your eyes glued on the cell phone. 


Hong Kong International Airport is big and bright with free wifi and free computers all over.


I found this interesting, both the instructions and the language.
Click and enlarge if you'd like to read about a multi-faith prayer room.


Finally it was goodbye to Hong Kong, and another long flight down to Australia.

Happiness, good luck, and prosperity to you in the Year of the Monkey!
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(Linking to OurWorld Tuesday.)
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Friday, September 25, 2015

Eerieness and the star of David

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No, unfortunately it's not the finger of God in the sky.
But it was my hand and camera and face reflected, rather unintentionally, so hey, let's share it over at James' Weekend Reflections.
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Monday, September 21, 2015

Thai citizens en route to Israel

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My month with the grandchildren came to an end all too quickly.
Early Saturday morning I bid farewell to my daughter's family and boarded a Qantas jet at Sydney airport.
After sitting in the plane half an hour waiting for two late passengers, we took off and had a nice10-hour flight to Thailand.


The 7-hour wait time in Bangkok airport was very long.
Sitting in this cavernous terminal until their midnight, with the reflections above and on every side, was kind of creepy. 


The second flight took 11 hours but after a long dark night we were rewarded with a lovely dawn, with El Al's star of David in the changing sky.
The sun was just rising and the views of southern Israel's deserts were breathtaking!


Touchtown at Ben-Gurion airport and, following tradition, everybody applauded.
It was a joy to be back home in the Holy Land, my land.

But as I looked around in the now-light plane, an El Al  jumbo jet, a code share flight with Thai Airways, I realized that very many of the hundreds of travelers were Thai citizens.
These are the men and women who come to work as in-home caretakers for our elderly.
These are the men who labor in our fields and our very hot hothouses, producing the food we eat.

It made me sad.
What has happened to our once pioneering country, that for the last several decades Jewish Israelis no longer do such physical work?
A.D. Gordon, who died in 1922 in Kibbutz Degania, must be turning over in his grave at the situation today.
He was a Zionist ideologue who believed that physical effort on the land would bring about the redemption of the Jewish people.
He attributed pioneer work a semi-religious status, arguing that it created an organic interrelationship between man, the land and culture.

A. D. Gordon: "Tolstoy in Palestine" - Poem - by Steven P. Schneider
Like Tolstoy, you longed to connect your life
to the soil.
You turned your back
on property, family, the high culture of Russia-
to live with peasants,
to work the vineyards and orange groves of Rishon Le-Zion.
Your stamina stunned the younger men
and women who worked beside you.
Your labor connected you to the land of your people.
It made you free.
Turning your back on the occupations of the Pale--
Talmudic scholar, money lender,
peddler, victim of pogroms--
You wanted to remake the Jew into a farmer.
Your weapon against history was the hoe--
Your work in the fields a new kind of worship.
With each digging of the hoe--
you discovered a new rung upon which to climb to heaven.
The sweat bathed your white beard.
Your eyes burned with the fire of holiness.
Tolstoy in Palestine,
you scribbled "Some Observations"
by candlelight in the predawn hours--
"our people," you wrote, "can be rejuvenated
through labor and a life close to nature."
At night, under the moon of Zion,
beside the campfire,
you preached your religion of labor
to all who would listen.
And when the dreamers of Israel
sang and danced,
you joined them
in the hora of the body reborn.
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(Linking to OurWorld Tuesday.)
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Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Sunrise in Sydney

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Guess what!  I landed in Sydney at sunrise this morning after 35 hours on the way!


Daughter Naomi picked me up at the airport and we drove to their new house over the Sydney Harbor Bridge.


So I hope you don't mind hearing about Australia for the next four weeks.  :)
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For ABC Wednesday F is for finally here!
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Thursday, December 11, 2014

Greeks and Jews in mock battle

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Meitar is used to hearing the deafening sound of Air Force jets overhead many times a day.
But these two fighter jets were so high I didn't even hear them.
I think they were part of the joint IDF-Hellenic Air Force drill week that took place down here in the Negev (Israel's southern desert).

This article says the Greek and Israeli squadrons "practiced different complex air-to-air scenarios, with a combination of aerial refueling, protecting strategic assets and dealing with unexpected threats in the sky in order to learn from one another."

Bonus: a sharp close-up of one of our F-16s taking off during the joint exercise.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Bitterness and a wish

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Psalm 14, here illustrated for Robert's weekly PsalmChallenge.
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1. For the leader. Of David.
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The fool says in his heart, “There is no God.”
They act corruptly and perform loathsome deeds. No one does good.
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2 The LORD looks down from heaven upon the children of men, to find a wise man, a man who seeks God.
3 Each and every one has turned astray, altogether foul; no one does good, not even one.
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4 Do they not understand, all those evildoers, who devour my people [as] they devour bread, and do not invoke the LORD?
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5 There they were terribly terrified, for God is present in the assembly of the righteous.
6 You would confound the plans of the lowly, but the LORD is his refuge.

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7 O that the deliverance of Israel might come from Zion!
When the LORD restores the fortunes of His people, Jacob will exult, Israel will rejoice.

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The Hebrew-English text is here.
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Photos:
1. Tel Aviv
2. A bread-devourer
3. "Kavod avud," Lost Honor, by Prof. Abraham Diskin, Mamilla Mall 2009 exhibit
4. "Zion"
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Sunday, December 5, 2010

Saved by Google

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NASA's satellite photo shows the smoke from the Carmel fires drifting out over the blue Mediterranean.
Thankfully, today, for the first time since Thursday we have more smoke than flame.
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A year ago I took this photo of flame retardant being released over our neighborhood monastery when their forest caught fire.
It shows you what kind of firefighting equipment the great state of Israel has--small agricultural cropdusters doing double duty!
What's more, in normal times these Chem-Nir planes do not stand at the ready; it takes at least 2 1/2 hours to get them airborne.
If not for the generous sending of help from neighbor countries and from Europe and America, we would be in big trouble right now. See the impressive list of aircraft that has arrived in the last few days here.
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This morning the world's largest firefighting aircraft landed at Ben-Gurion Airport.
The Evergreen Boeing Supertanker--see it being welcomed here!
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I watched the live coverage of its first sortie at 11 o'clock and it was very scary.
A huge aircraft flying over hills and around high tension wires and dropping its load of 80 tons of water plus chemicals just 300 feet above the ground!
All the other 34 aircraft in action were kept clear of the path of the huge Boeing.
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People in buildings in the area were told to shut the windows and turn on the airconditioners (IF they are not outward-facing) because this anti-fire material is dangerous to one's health.
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And how did we come to know about the existence of the Evergreen Supertanker?
Someone in our aircraft industry remembered hearing about it once.
They Googled Evergreen, found the company in Arizona, called, got PM Netanyahu's OK to pay the gigantic rental fees, and the deal was sealed in 15 minutes.
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I ask you, is this the way to run a country??
Does our safety depend on Google and the good will of foreign countries?
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Thursday, August 5, 2010

Climbing into the sky

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This jet has a funny face, but I can't decide if its mouth is smiling or frowning.
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Happy Sky Watch Friday to all of you who love to fly.
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Thursday, January 21, 2010

Clouds with engine noise

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Here in the Hills of Jerusalem the last four days have been cloudy, gray, chilly, and with rain off and on.
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What this crop-duster was dusting on the hill across the valley is beyond me.
I mean, it's not like we have crops on the slopes.
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Hope your skies are quieter than in these pictures.
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Thursday, March 19, 2009

Grandkids in the sky

Happy weekly SkyWatch to you. Guess what! My dear little grandsons, my daughter and my son-in-law are in a jet right now, winging their way northward and westward from Australia, via Korea, to Israel!
Imagine how jet-lagged little Dean and Eyal will be after crossing nine time zones.
They will be in Tel Aviv and then Jerusalem for a total of five weeks, including the holiday week of Passover. Yay!!
In just over three hours, at 10 p.m., they will touch down at Ben-Gurion Airport.
Happy landings!

Saturday, December 27, 2008

SkyWatch today IN the sky

Shalom SkyWatchers. After two days and two nights in planes, today I safely completed the journey from Israel to Sydney, Australia.
How beautiful it was to sit back and savor the fabulous sights above the clouds!
What a world!
Happy Sky Watch Friday to all.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Sleigh bells in the sky?

Good-bye smoggy Tel Aviv, hello blue Mediterranean

Hello dreamy evening sky over Europe
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Well, these shots are from my short flight to Switzerland a year ago, as evidenced by the Swiss cross.
BUT . . . as SkyWatch Friday opens next week I will be winging my way to Australia!
It is time to meet (for the first time) my one-year-old grandson and to see how much his five-year-old brother has grown. The boys will be on summer vacation and free to have lots of fun with Savta Dina for six weeks.
I have to be at Ben-Gurion Airport at 3:00 a.m. Christmas morning (Thursday), flying at 6:00. Tel Aviv to Madrid. Change planes. Fly to London, wait 6 hours at Heathrow, and only then start the flight back east, over Europe again, this time in the direction of Sydney, with a short stop in Bangkok. Landing in Australia on Saturday morning. From the first take-off to the last landing: 39 hours. zzzzzzzzzz...
Obviously, I will be out of blogging range for a few days. So to all who celebrate it, merry Christmas to you! If my jet passes Santa's sleigh and reindeer in the sky, you will hear about it.
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SkyWatch Friday has all kinds of tales and photos by hundreds of sky-watching bloggers around the globe. We always expand our horizon by visiting some of them.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Remembering the fallen

This was a day of sad thoughts about death from the skies.

I thought back to THE September 11, how I had sat in the Visitors Center of Heifer Ranch in Arkansas with my fellow volunteers watching the dreadful events occur on the TV screen.
We watched in shocked silence.
At first there was only visual, no audio from the scene. Suddenly the audio was added.
Hearing the sirens and hearing people on the street screaming and sobbing--it transported me to the all-too-familiar sounds and scenes of terror strikes in Israel and especially Jerusalem, then in the throes of the second intifada.
I burst out crying and got up to leave, to go cry on my donkeys' necks, murmuring to no one in particular, "I'm so sorry, Americans, that it takes this for you to feel what Israel has felt so often."

Their . . . our, world would never be the same.

Last night was also the end of the world as they knew it for two families in Israel.
Major (reserves) Yuval Holtzman, 40, father of three, and Major (res.) Shai Danor, father of five, were piloting a helicopter when apparently its rotor flew off and the body of the Cobra crashed to the ground and burned.
All our Cobras were today grounded.
They are in use in the Israel Air Force since the 1970s and before that, the Americans used these same gunships in Vietnam. They are getting old.


Now for some nice words about helicopters. This is the new helipad nearing completion at Hadassah Hospital.

The wounded and injured will be taken on the elevator directly down to the Emergency Medicine Department.

That will be an improvement over this. Here two choppers are landing on the outside landing place.
From here the stretcher cases have to be transported across the street and through several buildings.

Our moshav is just on the next hill. My house is under the flight pattern to Hadassah.
I see the helping helicopters almost everyday and say a little prayer each time.
But today all Israel says a prayer for the pilots we lost last night who themselves became victims.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

T is for Travel

Two too-heavy travel bags.
Taking three (!) trains from Jerusalem to the airport.
Taxiing on the tarmac.
Time for my guests to land and be greeted at the terminal.