Post
by Ruger » Tue Oct 26, 2010 7:29 pm
I once had a really cool aborted landing. We were coming into San Fransisco, which is always pretty cool anyway, since the runway is out over the water, but in this case, our rear wheels had touched, but the front was still off the ground when the pilot hit the throttle and we shot back up into the sky. He explained that some ground traffic had failed to clear the end of the runway we were trying to use, so he opted to go around. We got a really nice low altitude tour of S.F. then out over the Golden Gate, a big left turn to follow the coast south, then back over the hills to approach over the bay again. It was one of my best moments of commercial flying.
To make things even better, this was after we had gotten a great aerial tour of Yosemite earlier in order to burn excess fuel we had due to favorable winds. The pilot let us know about 30-45 minutes beforehand with an announcement something like this:
"Ladies and gentlemen, I'm pleased to announce that we've had some very favorable winds on this flight, and this has left us with some extra fuel onboard. We'd like to burn a little of it off before we land, so what I'm going to do take us a little further south than normal, and down a little, then make a nice wide banked 270 degree turn above Yosemite. For those of you seated on the left side of the aircraft, you'll get an amazing, once-in-a-lifetime view of Half-Dome as we circle it, and for those of you on the right side of the aircraft... Next time try to sit on the left..."
"I'll let you know about two minutes in advance, so you can have your cameras ready"
I was quite lucky, as I had a window seat on the left side of the plane. My father, who was sitting next to me, also had a good view, but his overall experience was somewhat less than mine, due to the sudden influx of right side passengers into/onto his seat as we turned. It really was a great view of Half Dome, and the pilot was right, I'll probably never get one like that again. And the pilot's commentary and humor, both for that announcement, and others, really made the flight one to remember.
Shame flying doesn't seem to be like that anymore...
MV
"When I went into Kuwait I had 39 tanks, after six weeks of air bombardment, I had 32 left. After 20 minutes in action against the M1's, I had none." Iraqi BN Cdr, 1991
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