Military Posts

Becoming a Pilot: Is it a Relevant Choice?
June 13, 2010

Becoming a Pilot: Is it a Relevant Choice?

Is it karma that led NPR to broadcast a story on the dwindling number of student pilots in June? It reported an FAA estimate that this year’s number of student pilot certificates would total less than 60,000, a “10 year low.” If yo…
DC-3 Reunion Anchors Reflective Airline Arc
May 24, 2010

DC-3 Reunion Anchors Reflective Airline Arc

Reflection is an unintended consequence of a wide interest in aviation, and connecting past with present is the EAA AirVenture Oshkosh reunion of the iconic airplane that earns its keep still, even as it approaches its 75th birthday. Some call it t…
Modern Conflict & the Future of Fighters
May 12, 2010

Modern Conflict & the Future of Fighters

Several days ago I read a New York Times Op-Ed piece, Leading With Two Minds. In it, David Brooks described how the US Army, in five short years, had reshaped itself to fight insurgencies with something other than overwhelming force. Thirty-five y…
Adventure and the Future of Flying
April 28, 2010

Adventure and the Future of Flying

Celebrating her birthday at our favorite brewpub, my wife was spending part of the quarter-billion dollar Powerball lottery prize just before the drawing that gave it to a Missouri convenience store worker instead of her and a pool of coworkers. S…
Pro Pilot Training Evolving to Industry Needs
March 29, 2010

Pro Pilot Training Evolving to Industry Needs

Last week a number of sources, including the Nashua Telegraph, reported that Daniel Webster College was phasing out its professional pilot training program. It’s not the first flight training program to close, nor will it be the last, but tha…
No-Pilot Aircraft Go Vertical & Hover
Feb. 14, 2010

No-Pilot Aircraft Go Vertical & Hover

At a fundamental level I understand the technology that makes no-pilot, remotely controlled aircraft work. And it seems to work well in fixed-wing aircraft that fly high in the controlled airspace (see UAV Pilot Shortage & Military Intelligence&…
UND Plants Seed of No-Pilot Airliners
Jan. 11, 2010

UND Plants Seed of No-Pilot Airliners

Much has been made lately of the University of North Dakota’s new bachelor’s of science degree in aeronautics with a major in Unmanned Aircraft Systems Operations, taught at the Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences in Grand Forks.UND i…
Virtual Vacation & Warm Weather Plans
Jan. 5, 2010

Virtual Vacation & Warm Weather Plans

On a sunny day when the wind speed is 10 times the single digit temperature, giving into web wanderlust beats the hypothermia that awaits outside. An interest in historic byways lead me to the National Park Service’s National Register Travel I…
July 20, 1969: Where Were you?
July 20, 2009

July 20, 1969: Where Were you?

I was a teenager in the 60’s which for me translates into a few key trigger points etched in my mind. The day President Kennedy was shot I was in shop class. When Martin Luther King was assassinated, I was off on active duty with the U.S. Air …
Enola Gay’s Wendover Hangar On Top 11 List
May 13, 2009

Enola Gay’s Wendover Hangar On Top 11 List

Aviation history is written by the triad of people, planes, and places, and news about any of the three always catches my attention. The National Trust for Historic Preservation recently published its 22nd annual list of the nation’s 11 Most …
CAP Helped F-16s Follow Canadian Skyhawk
April 14, 2009

CAP Helped F-16s Follow Canadian Skyhawk

The failed suicidal cross-country flight of 31-year-old Adam Leon drew a lot of media attention here in Wisconsin. When it was clear that he was approaching Madison (he never got closer than 5 miles), Governor Jim Doyle ordered the capitol evacuate…
UAV Pilot Shortage & Military Intelligence
March 24, 2009

UAV Pilot Shortage & Military Intelligence

A recent New York Times’s article, “Drones Are Weapons of Choice in Fighting Qaeda, ” added to the mounting evidence that Unmanned Aerial Vehicles are changing the face of military aviation. This is especially true in the U.S. Air …
Share Thumbs-Up Moments With Everyone
March 10, 2009

Share Thumbs-Up Moments With Everyone

If you haven’t heard, the Internet and blogs like JetWhine are killing print journalism. Slowly, community journalists, everyday people with an interest in their community, are becoming our primary source of news. If you doubt this, watch TV …
EMS Helicopter Safety: First, Do No Harm
Feb. 25, 2009

EMS Helicopter Safety: First, Do No Harm

A confirmed rotorhead, I recently invested some unexpected free time looking into the NTSB’s public hearing on Safety of Helicopter Emergency Medical Services (HEMS) Operations. I didn’t have the time to watch four days of video availabl…
Finding Good News at OSH
Jan. 4, 2009

Finding Good News at OSH

Reveling in good news is how I always try to start the new year, but finding it in aviation has been a challenge in the relentless headwind of layoffs, furloughs, shutdowns, and bankruptcy filings. But I did find some, in my own backyard, at OSH, be…
Do Pilots Still Fly for Fun?
Dec. 15, 2008

Do Pilots Still Fly for Fun?

A good question, posed by Matt Thomas in his comment about New Book Holds Hope for Aviation’s Future. “Do they risk finding other things to do that are perhaps more fun?” he asked on the next line, referring to pilots in general a…
Next-Gen Challenge: Selling Aviation
Nov. 19, 2008

Next-Gen Challenge: Selling Aviation

Cessna recently lifted the lid on its next generation flight training program. After military and airline training programs have proven the efficacy of scenario-based training for decades, Cessna is finally bringing it to general aviation. Working…
ACA Fights Financial Fires With Aqua-Bama
Nov. 3, 2008

ACA Fights Financial Fires With Aqua-Bama

Airframe manufacturers are dealing with the financial fires spawned by the global economic meltdown in many ways, including reorganization, furloughs, and layoffs. American Champion Aircraft is pursuing a different tact, introducing a new airplane…
Rare Fw-190 Part Found in Rural Kansas
Sept. 29, 2008

Rare Fw-190 Part Found in Rural Kansas

When I traveled recently to rural eastern Kansas to write and shoot a profile for Aviation for Women, the magazine of Women In Aviation International, holding the last surviving part of a Focke-Wulf Fw 190 was the last thing I expected to do. But h…
Cole & Kittinger: Hearing History First Hand
Aug. 2, 2008

Cole & Kittinger: Hearing History First Hand

It seems fitting that my fourth decade of EAA AirVenture attendance starts like the first, meeting those who made the history I read about as a kid.On my first trip to Oshkosh in 1978 I met Pappy Boyington and George Gay (see EAA AirVenture Forums…
Where is the Best Aviation Blog?
June 19, 2008

Where is the Best Aviation Blog?

As much as stay awake at night wondering how many people around the globe are clicking through the stories here at Jetwhine, I know we are only one small fish in the sea of people who think they know just about everything when it comes to air travel…
Aerotrekking Back to Coffin Corner
June 12, 2008

Aerotrekking Back to Coffin Corner

Given the world’s sorry state and aviation’s place in it, hope for the future is at the coffin corner. To help maintain that delicate balance it is natural to withdraw into–and protect–our little corner of aviation’s di…
Woracle: Aviation Blogger Astounds and Mystifies
March 14, 2008

Woracle: Aviation Blogger Astounds and Mystifies

If you haven’t read Graham Warwick’s blog – the Woracle – you’re missing something spectacular. I’m always amazed at the cutting-edge topics he covers.But maybe he has more time on his hands because the English a…