On another adventure today, on the way to a new destination again but first, stopping at a familiar spot to clear US Customs and proceed southbound. This is short final runway 05 at Greensboro, North Carolina (KGSO). It is a quiet little airport for American standards but has a huge runway, a very friendly FBO (Landmark) and very punctual Customs Agents. It's nice now after doing this for awhile and clearing at the same spots over and over the custom's agent just looks at the paperwork and passport ask's how cold it is up in Canada and we carry on. There was the Customs agent in Battle Creek who made fun of the size of my head on my Passport photo ! I cleared a few counties over on another flight and he came walking out and I was like oh great....but I had just had a new picture taken for it. So I told him this as he took it from he and he said "What did you have to draw it in yourself to make it not look so big!" The nerve :) This guy was pretty funny though and he was the first Customs agent I have ever spent 30 minutes talking to after we were cleared. US Customs from my experience have been for the most part extremely proffesional and friendly. There is the odd guy who comes out in aviator 70's shades and isn't up for small talk but they are few and far between.
Southbound over the East coast of Florida en-route to Key Largo (Ocean Reef Club Airport). Here is a view of Launch Complex 39 (picture from the ground off Wikipedia) It encloses a total area of 130,000,000 square feet !!! No wonder they put that sucker in Florida, imagine the heating bill if it was up North !
It's in the GPS database and according to AirNav.com it has civilian traffic. I am sure you have to arrange your visit ahead of time though.
The next space shuttle to leave this pad will be Atlantis as STS-117 this May.
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Having just come back from a trip to Florida and the Kennedy Space Centre ... Center I highly recommend the tour at KSC. The Apollo/Saturn VI exhibit is truly awe inspiring. You can't fully appreciate the scope of what's been accomplished until you get up close and personal with a Saturn VI rocket. That thing's enormous! My hat is off to all the men and women who worked together to put man on the moon.
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