Tokyo > NYC

Tokyo > NYC is the kind of comparison you can’t make with numbers. It’s something you feel in your pocket, in the quiet weight of a ticket stub, in the way a city follows you home.

I’m looking at a small skyline—an Empire State Building miniature—standing upright on a wooden table like it’s trying to prove something. Under it, a postcard flashes the familiar: lights, crowds, bright squares of color. There’s a paper marked “BROOKLYN,” and a small “I ♥ NY” tucked in close, like a charm meant to hold a moment in place.

Cities do that. They become objects, then memories, then a kind of weather you carry around. Tokyo feels like motion—clean lines, late trains, a sense of order that still leaves room for mystery. New York feels like friction—noise and energy and the strange comfort of being one face in a million.

Maybe “Tokyo > NYC” is just a mood, a snapshot taken mid-flight, when you can still hear one place while landing in another. But I like how the souvenirs argue quietly on the table. They don’t settle the question. They just remind me that travel isn’t about choosing a winner—it’s about noticing what each place wakes up inside you, and what follows you back through the door.

JFK > SEA, first leg of the trip to Japan

The cabin light has that familiar, late-afternoon glow—the kind that makes everything feel a little softer than it really is. I’m stretched out in my seat, shoes tucked forward, the screen in front of me running an ad about comfort and legroom, as if it’s trying to narrate the moment while I’m living it.

JFK > SEA is only the first leg, but it already feels like the threshold. Airports have their own weather: recycled air, muted announcements, the low tide of people moving with purpose. On the plane, time becomes something you can fold up and put away for later. The tray table clicks. The seat settles. A small pocket of stillness appears.

There’s a strange comfort in these in-between hours—suspended over the country, watching the world reduce itself to patterns and light. It’s not Japan yet, not even close, but the trip has started in the only way trips really start: by leaving.

Seattle is a pause, a breath, a handoff. Soon there will be different signs, different streets, different morning sounds. For now, I’m content to let the hum of the plane and the quiet choreography of travel do their work—carrying me forward while I sit still, thinking about the distance ahead and the stories waiting on the other side of it.

C47 D-day Flight Experience

C47 D-day Flight Experience

| What a great weekend to experience American Airpower Museum’s (AAM) WWII reenactment by taking the C47 D-day Flight Experience. It was such a thrill to take a fight in such a historic plane, the Douglass C-47 “Skytrain” a.k.a. SECOND CHANCE. So proud to be contributing to the preservation of our US History and honoring those who have fought to protect this country! Highlights include “dressing the part”, speaking with the pilots in the cockpit mid-flight, pretending to do a jump, the scenic view.

A Big Thanks to our Pilot (Jim Vocell) and Co-Pilots on the flight as well as to all the event staff and volunteers (many of which are veterans). +++ Not to mention Jeff & Jacky Clyman.

| ✈️??

| Read Insta-comments -> http://ift.tt/1qU4dU1

Warbird Weekend Preview

Warbird Weekend Preview

| Added some cool photos of the Airshow plus some really cool aircraft and metal textures. Nothing is quite like aircraft aluminum. Main photo is of the Curtiss P-40 “Warhawk”

| ✈️??

| Read Insta-comments -> http://ift.tt/1qSGK5H

The Flight that ended my Summer – Back in NYC from Orlando

The Flight that ended my Summer – Back in NYC from Orlando

What a great way to end the summer! The flight home was a bit bitter sweet. As you can see from the photo fall is already creeping into the landscape.

| ✈️ ?

| Read Insta-comments -> http://bt.zamartz.com/15N6eax

Cockpit USA | B-15 Z2702

Cockpit USA | B-15 Z2702

Retailing for $750, this 100% oiled, deer tanned, cowhide, jacket is a recreation of the 1944 bomber jacket that was worn by WWII army air force pilots. The jacket features a luxurious removable mouton fur collar, zip in quilted lining vest insulated with a polyester fiberfill. Other details include a front zipper over a wind flap, two snap close side entry pockets, inside pocket for wallet, cell phone or media player, original style oxygen mask tab, knit cuffs and waistband, and sleeve pen/pencil pocket. Proudly made in the U.S.A.

I’ve worn this out every day since I got it and it’s by far one of the best quality jacket I own! COCKPIT USA

Sorry I look a bit tired in this but it’s not a …. bad photo overall – It’s abou the jacket anyway!

Boeing Plant Camouflaged

Boeing Plant Camouflaged

South of downtown Seattle is an old Boeing airplane assembly plant that produced nearly 7000 Flying Fortresses while hidden beneath a roof with a fake suburban neighborhood on top. The site is now the source for a huge lumber salvage operation – Duluth Timber Company is now deconstructing the 1.7 million square foot facility and reclaiming the lumber for real homes. The beauty of reclaimed lumber is not just in its quality and size but in its history – and the ¼ million board feet that will come out of this deconstruction has a lot of tales to tell.

(via InHabitat)

Exit mobile version