Blue Angels Homecoming 2009

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wfooshee

O, Woe is me!!
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My pictures from the 2009 Blue Angels Homecoming air show. I rode over Friday morning and attended the day show, only to discover that the night show had been moved to Saturday, and I didn't get the memo. I wasn't going to return, but the weather Saturday was perfect, the missus was at work, so I had nothing better to do, as it turns out. So I left home a bit after 12:30 and rode west a couple hours again to see the night show.

They parked me a little over a mile from the flight line when I arrived. I asked the Marine if I couldn't do better being on a bike, and he said that with the day show ending, traffic setup out of the show was already in place and I couldn't get any closer. So not only a ride, but a hike.

I arrive late enough on Friday to miss just a couple of acts, Skip Stewart is his Prometheus biplane and Pattry Wagstaff in her Extra. The skydivers were jumping in with the flag when I arrived.

First pics are the Geico Skytypers, flying SNJs, the Navy version of the T-6 Texan trainer. If you were a Naval aviator and joined before the dawn of recorded history, you may have learned to fly in one of these. The Skytypers advertising mission is to fly 6 aircraft, 5 abreast with one controller, and they release smoke in computer-timed spurts, making themselves a giant dot-matrix printer in the sky. They also fly a formation airshow as seen here.

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There was an F-16 demonstration which took place during my much-needed port-a-potty visit, and afterwards they had the Air Force Heritage Flight, the F-16 and a P-47 Thunderbolt from the Lone Star Flight Museum in Galveston, Texas.

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Next up was the show "Ten Sticks of Dynamite," with Skip Stewart, Patty Wagstaff, Kent Shockley in his Shockwave jet truck, and fuel bombs on the field.

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Prometheus:

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and Patty Wagstaff:

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Next up were the Aerostars, flying Russian-built YAK-52 aerobatic trainers. These guys fly the tightest formations I've seen in a piston-engine team.

Another little irony I found is that when the skydive team was bringing in the U.S. flag they were being circled by three aircraft making a big spiral smoke pattern in the sky surrounding the jumper with the flag. This is the team that did that. Russian-built trainers now used to render honors to the U.S. flag as it arrives at an air show. Cool.

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Next up, Fat albert. They did one of the few JATO shots they're able to do this year, but I was shooting video. No pics of that this time.

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Then the Blues themselves. What's the smallest space four aircraft can take up?

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Dirty loop:

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Double Farvel, 1 and 4 inverted:

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Echelon right:

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They also do a 5-ship line abreast loop:

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Delta roll, all 6 aircraft:

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A couple of yanking and banking shots. Because you have to:

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Now for Saturday's twilight/night show. The sun is very low as the show starts, but it's still light out.

Skip Stewart and Prometheus:

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Patty Wagstaff and her inverted ribbon cut. She had to do it the opposite direction from normal because in the planned direction, she was facing straight into the sun and couldn't see the ribbon, poles, people, runway, whatever.

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This is what she was looking at going the other direction. Nice, but not good when you have to see something between yourself and that light.

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Skydivers came next, and their starting altitude had them still in full sunlight, even though it had just disappeared from view at ground level:

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Aerostar team circling the flag-bearing skydiver:

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The Aerostar planes had rear-facing landing lights to illuminate the smoke. It mostly made for a rocket-type appearance. And that is what color the sky was, looking northeast!

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"Bandits" rolling in for the next pass:

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Really getting dark, now, a sea of blue field lights:

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What better performer now than the Shockwave jet truck! He made a circle puffing smoke, and disappeared. At first I was thinking, "Well, that was dumb! We can't see anything now!" Then he lit up the jets from inside the cloud:

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and eventually emerged. none of these shots are at speed; he's just puffing the exhaust with fuel to make a pretty fire:

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The rest of what I have is on video. If I ever get it edited I'll post a link, but I've changed my PC out and Premiere is giving me fits. I hope I don't have to use Windows Movie Maker or something!

There was no night JATO this time. I guess they wasted the last bottles on the day show. There were fireworks and the Wall of Fire, which I have on video. I promise.

As I was riding home, heading east, There came a point where I noticed the constellation Orion rising ahead of me. As the trip progressed, Orion got higher in the sky, and it made me feel that I was getting closer to it!

Video links:

, the night show, is finally up. I don't know for sure what the problem was, but Youtube kept refusing the upload, says it doesn't recognize the format. Used the same encoder and the same settings, so I'm not sure why. It's up now, though.
 
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Way to go!!! Very nice pics and report. I sure got to go to a show sometime but the night show really seemed strange but yielded some cools pics as well.

 
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Awesome pics Walt :good:

And we think we're special riding in groups? Lookit them tight formations!

Very impressive to say the least..

Thanks,

:jester:

 
I flew a TA-4 with an instructor at Corpus NAS in 1980...that's when the Angels flew A-4's like John McCain did.

Do ya'll realize the Thunderbirds fly 3-4 feet wingtip to wingtip and the Angels fly 3-4 feet wingtip to canopy with the wingtips overlapping.

Yikes

if interested, Google "blue angels from the cockpit video"

 
Exceptional photos of exceptional people doing exceptional flying....

shown on an exception forum for exceptional riders.

B)

 
Great shots. Thanks for posting. I love the angels :yahoo: I see them every time they're in Cleveland, which is every other year. A fantastic show. Looks like you had a great ay day...

 
Video is cut, finally, now converting to useful web-usable formats. Maybe a link sometime tomorrow.

 
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[SIZE=14pt]Hard-*******-Core!!![/SIZE]

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Brings a tear to my eye, remembering my days in Tailhook Aviation...... Blue Angels kick major ***!!

 
one can imagine what it's like when these boys are conducting real *** kicking shock and awe action if the need arises... :assassin:

there are non better than Blue Angel pilots!

 
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Very nice..It would have been cool to get your FJR in those pictures somehow with the Blue Angels flying over your bike..this is as close as I got to getting a plane to fly over me. Whidbley Navel Air Station, WA

 
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I flew a TA-4 with an instructor at Corpus NAS in 1980...that's when the Angels flew A-4's like John McCain did.
Do ya'll realize the Thunderbirds fly 3-4 feet wingtip to wingtip and the Angels fly 3-4 feet wingtip to canopy with the wingtips overlapping.

Yikes

if interested, Google "blue angels from the cockpit video"

One of the best times I had in the Navy was the 7 months I spent at tech school in P-cola. I was there from November to Juneish and got to watch how the Blue Angels work in the off-season. Our school shut down for an hour every Tuesday at 9am and we took a long break to watch practice. In November the spacing in the formations was huge and every week we could see it get just a little bit closer...closer..closer.closercloser until all of a sudden they were gone, out on the road again.

I had seen them preform before and after and I can say I defiantly appreciate what they can do even more.

I can also tell you the most powerful thing you could ever see at an airshow is the "Missing Man Formation" I don't remember the year but the Angels had a crash and lost a pilot in GA the week before they were coming to our show at NAS Jacksonville. They canceled the Jax show and in tribute the missing man was flown. 3 F-14's and an F-18 in the diamond float slowly across the airfield then the 18 pulls straight up and climbs very slowly until it was out of sight. I cried like baby and still get choked up thinking about it.

The Blue's are absolutely awesome and had I stayed in, I would have tried to be one.

 
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