TonyK
Global Moderator
Hero Member
Posts: 6594
The artist formerly known as Four Track, Now!
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« Reply #6 on: January 26, 2013, 23:38:18 » |
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I think I have cracked this one. The key to Google Earth links is that you need a Google account, and have to be signed in before you can share. It is free to set up, and gives you a gmail address as well. So you find your scene, sign in, and a "Share" button appears. Choose share by email, then copy the url that appears. It's a bit unwieldy.
I like Morlaix, and hope to return there by Eurostar and SNCF▸ . There is some terrific food to be had, with cr^pes, galettes, and fruits de mer on every menu. Oysters▸ proliferate, and it is true what they say about them. The Bretons are big in black pudding and sausage, all of which can be washed down with the local cider, with a Calvados finale.
There is another way to get there. Just north of the town, you see an airfield, which is Morlaix Ploujean, owned by the local Chamber of Commerce. It has 3 runways (6 if you want to be pedantic) the largest of which is over 1800 metres long. I spent time on holiday nearby, and watched a couple of Bombardier turboprops land there, doing what I later learned to be an overhead join into the circuit. I got as far as preparing a flight plan from Filton, routing over the Isle of Wight to minimise the time spent over water, then down the Cherbourg peninsula, as much to get me a view of that viaduct as anything else. It fascinated me - it has the basic look of that Roman aqueduct, and was built before the Clifton suspension bridge. I never did it, as I stopped flying, and can't do it now as Filton is being desecrated. It would have been a challenge - the international language of aviation is English, I speak reasonable French, but would have had to rely on an air traffic controller's English. There is a problem with smaller airports abroad, where local traffic uses the home language. Accidents have happened because English pilots have not known what French pilots are doing.
There is a story of an impatient German pilot at Berlin Tempelhof being told to speak English. He asked "I am a German pilot flying a German aircraft from a German airport to another German airport. Why should I have to speak English?" The pilot of another unidentified aircraft answered "Because we won the bloody war, old chap!" The truth is fairly close to that. It is strange, though, because so many aircraft terms come from French - fuselage, empennage, olio, aileron etc. Even the distress calls Pan Pan Pan (from French "en panne", or broken down) and Mayday (or "m'aidez" -help me) have their roots in French, mainly because Louis Bleriot beat us to it.
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