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Leaving on a Jet Plane for the North PoleNorth Pole Expedition 2002 |
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The North Pole Expedition starts when we are leaving Chicago on a jet plane |
North Pole 2002
Aerial Photos page 1 Every North Pole Expedition has it's start, here we are leaving from Chicago O'hare on a Jet Plane. |
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Every Expedition has a beginning and
an end. This is the beginning, leaving on a jet plane from Chicago
to Milan Italy. This flight was about ten hours from terminal
to terminal and McDonnell Douglas' MD-11 made the flight absolutely
tremendous. I rode in the coach section of the aircraft and
had a window seat at the very front of the cabin on the starboard side.
We took off from O'Hare Airport and in the very short distance from O'Hare
to Downtown Chicago we gained fifteen or twenty thousand feet.
Look above to see the picture from the window at that very moment.
I could see the Sears Tower, the John Hancock Building, Navy Pier and Miggs Field all framed up in my cameras viewfinder, then I took this shot. We continued to climb into a layer of haze just soon after this. The next shot of Chicago just didn't come out very good because of this haze. We continued to climb to cruising altitude
and traversed several layers of thin clouds. When we came out on
top,
the view was outstanding. I could see all different types
of clouds as I was looking through the different layers that were completely
covering the face of the earth. After a short while I watched another
commercial airliner cruising the other way while making a beautiful condensation
trail. It was like I was in a spaceship heading for another
world. If you really think of it at 34,000 feet the temperature outside
is about a minus seventy degrees, the wind speed is in excess of six hundred
miles per hour and the air is so thin that you would not be able to breath
and if you were out there, you would surely parish. Those are
real bad conditions, but, here we sit in great comfort in an air-conditioned
cabin drinking Marlot wine and being served by a beautiful Italian stewardess
who has a fantastic smile. That's Life! What more can you ask
for?
The Trip Continues |
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The background
picture on this page is an actual photo of the
snow on the North
Pole. -- C. Jeff Dyrek, webmaster
/North_Pole_2002/Aerial_Photos_1.html|10909"
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