Did Flying Dragons Really Exist?
Flying dragons are creatures of fantasy, or at least that is what most people today think, but one must ask, could they have possibly existed? It is easy to say “NO” without backing the answer up to any degree. Let us talk about facts.
The Fight or Flight Reaction
Stress’ common denominator is change. As long as we live, we will experience thousands of changes every day.
Fight in Flight
A true life descriptive story of a soccer game trip outside of the United States of America during the United States’s invasion and brief occupation of the Central American country of Panama.
The First Flight in History
The first flight covered 120 feet (39 meters) in 12 seconds. In the fourth flight of the day, Wilbur flew 852 feet (279 meters) in 59 seconds, about 10 feet above the ground. After this, the wind turned the Flyer over, smashing it. Just five passerbies had seen them, and the next day a single local newspaper briefly reported their achievement.
Southern Airways Flight 242
A depiction of the Southern Airways 242 flight that crash in New Hope, Georgia in 1977.
Historic Animals – Top Three Greek Mythological Creatures
My top three Greek Mythological Creatures, including descriptions of each and their story with pictures included. Enjoy
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Zeppelins Over LA
After over a half century, zeppelins take to the skies again offering commercial passage.
The Invention of the Airplane
The Wright brothers were interested in flight from a young age, supposedly, when their father gave them a toy balloon. This sparked an interest in the mystery of flying.
A Short History of Flight
No one knows how long humans have dreamed of flying, but this concept informed some of Western culture’s earliest stories. Around the time BC became AD, the Roman poet Ovid told the tale of Daedalus and his son Icarus. The first storytellers as well as their audiences could see snow persisting on the highest mountain peaks during warm weather; clearly, air did not grow warmer with altitude, and the sun would not have melted the wax holding Icarus’s feathers to his wings.
The Lost Hijacker: D.b. Cooper
D.B. Cooper is not likely to be the man’s real name, but the crime he committed was. D.B. Cooper stole $200,000 in cash from Northwest Airlines in 1971, took four parachutes, and jumped from a Northwest Airlines Boeing 727 between South Washington and Portland into a cloudy, cold, rainy night. The man was never seen or heard from again.






















