You can’t fall in love with your jewel. You have always known it, but never dreamed it would be a problem. Every time you think you’ve managed to escape your feelings, they flood back. A smile, a look, a sharp word: needles to the heart, as sharp and biting as if you’d bee...
According to Greek mythology, Atlas sided with the Titans in a war against the Greek god Zeus, and as punishment was doomed to hold the entire heavens aloft forever. He's often depicted in art as holding the world on his back. Atlas, it seems, knows a little bit about heavy burdens. ...
paper constructions such as Paxolin. They are often molded with optimized airfoils for specific flight patterns. They may have holes in them for greater wind resistance or customization. They may be designed for specific boomerang sport events, such as MTA ( maximum Time Aloft ) or Aussie Round...
paper constructions such as Paxolin. They are often molded with optimized airfoils for specific flight patterns. They may have holes in them for greater wind resistance or customization. They may be designed for specific boomerang sport events, such as MTA ( maximum Time Aloft ) or Aussie Round...
paper constructions such as Paxolin. They are often molded with optimized airfoils for specific flight patterns. They may have holes in them for greater wind resistance or customization. They may be designed for specific boomerang sport events, such as MTA ( maximum Time Aloft ) or Aussie Round...
ian bates the key ingredient in a firestorm, whether in a wartime bombing campaign, a plume-driven fire like the carr, or a wind-driven fire like the one that destroyed paradise, appears to be the simultaneous burning of many small fires in a combination of light and heavy fuels over a ...
caused when warm air aloft ends up on the northern, cooler side of thejet stream. It’s a very stable pattern that tends to not budge for days. It gets its name from its appearance on upper-air wind charts that steer winds around the lows and highs in the shape of the Greek letter...
My mother emailed me last week to ask if she was using the word “nor” correctly, which brings us to today’s post: the use of either or and neither nor.
“When I get into an airplane now, I have ForeFlight connected to my headset and my ADS-B transponder. It’s a 3-dimensional volume of continuously updated, live information: weather, traffic, TFRs, runway closures, winds aloft, even fuel prices. It’s like having a co-pil...