The Perfect Gift!


My sister Katie, and her husband Scott, got a new dog this past weekend. It is a very small Chihuahua and doesn’t have a name yet.

For now, his name is “The Perfect Gift” but not for reasons that you may think. He may have been the perfect gift to Katie, but he is nicknamed that for now because of his birthday. How, you say? He was born on Christmas day. Every Christmas, Katie works very hard to get everyone the “Perfect Gift” and when we open one of her gifts, we all have to stop and watch it be opened, because, you guessed it, it’s the Perfect Gift! So for now, this cute little guy is The Perfect Gift, because of his unique birthday.

I look forward to seeing him in person . . .

UPDATE: His name is Pip!

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How much are you saving?


Freedom is the end-goal of saving. The more you save, the freer you are. When you have no more debt, and a stockpile of savings and investments, you are free. Free from the bondage of banks, free from the crushing weight of creditors, free from the worries of paycheck to paycheck penny-pinching, and most importantly, free do things with your money you never would have thought possible.

With a healthy savings, you will insulate yourself, to a degree, from the disasters that life brings. Sleepless nights due to worrying if a broken leg or a loss of job will financially ruin you are a thing of the past with six months to a year of net income in your high-yield online savings account. If, after taxes, you make $3,000 dollars a month, a good goal is to have (6×3) $18,000 dollars in a savings account. If you are a rock star, have $36,000 dollars in your online savings account. Each person in America should have a free, easy to set up, high interest, online savings account, and click here to know why.

Here’s the rub. Here’s the problem. We Americans don’t care about saving! We don’t lay awake at night worrying what will happen if our next paycheck doesn’t come. We don’t care about having a safety net because we live in the present. Living in the present is certainly fun because with a paycheck and a credit card, every one of our toys we buy is free and carries no financial consequence. Don’t live in the present! Instead, remember the past and think of the future. Forget the present, it’s worthless, and means nothing without the context of the past and future. Past financial disasters can teach us lessons today. And like the cliche says: we will repeat those same mistakes, lest we listen to the advice given from days long ago. Furthermore, if we focus our eyes on the future, then our smart financial decisions in the present will make so much sense. The idea of saving will be so salient and the pain of putting money away will fall into place, if we have an eye on the future.

So why does this matter? According to a statistic stated by Dave Ramsey, the Japanese save the most of any culture in the world, at 18.1% of their income. By nature, the Asian culture saves; that is just who they are. By contrast, the culture that saves the least, is you guessed it, Americans. What is our savings rate? Negative 2%! We spend more than we earn by 2%! With that kind of savings plan, we are not free. We are enslaved. We are beholden to our creditors, our toys, our banks, and can do nothing with our money, but pay it back to those who own us. In 2007, Americans spent 8.5 trillion dollars. Great for the economy, right? Well, the scary thing is that 6.8 trillion of it was spent on credit! Will that credit be paid back? Not nearly all of it and as it isn’t paid back, our economy will slide further into recession as both lenders and borrowers fall into trouble. Let me ask you a question: Are you free or does someone or some creditor own you?

If someone owns you, do you want to turn that ship around? Do you want to be free? I can guarantee that becoming free will only happen with a lifestyle change that involves a new mindset. “Make every thought captive so that it conforms to” your financial goals. Remember the past and look to the future, everyday, at every purchase!

Laura and I are not on an ivory pedestal. Three different banks own us and we are not free. We want to be and I hope you want to be too. Because I fly for an airline, it is always assumed that I make oodles of money. The truth is that I made more at Burger King than I did my first year of flying. If I wanted money, I would have gone into another profession, as an: engineer, doctor, architect, physical therapist, dentist, or go into business for myself. I won’t see 100K a year for YEARS! I say this only because I don’t want people thinking that I’m some richie rich with all the answers and pointing the finger at all the indentured servants below me. The truth is that Laura and I are indentured like all the rest! We just want to make smart decisions and hope that everyone in the U.S. will too.

Start today by opening up an online savings account here or here. It will link to your checking account so that you can set it up to automatically withdraw some money from your checking account and place it into the high interest savings account. I don’t care if it’s $10 dollars a month, do it! At least with a high interest savings account, your money in savings will keep up with, or stay ahead of inflation. Otherwise, with inflation, you are actually losing money on anything kept in a checking account.

Another smart way to stay ahead of inflation, and actually make money is a wise investment in gold. Unlike a stock or mutual fund, gold is always worth something. With the dollar falling in value like a safe thrown from a fourth story window, the value of gold is rising. Why? Many reasons, for which most can be Googled. A few are: Foreign investors are pulling out of the dollar, the Federal Reserve continues to drop interest rates, the economy is slowing, and fear is in the market. When there is fear in the market, a safe place to run is gold, which is where many investors are turning: hence the spike in the value of gold and the further weakening of the dollar. You can buy some gold bars/coins and store them in a safe place in your house or add gold investments to your portfolio. You will be a rock star in my eyes for doing either or both. Start here for more on buying gold.

Start now! Here is another quick example from Dave Ramsey why it is smart to start now instead of waiting:

Two brothers, the same age, turn 18. Brother one starts to invests $2,000 a year, which is only $166 dollars a month, into an investment each year until he turns 26. For you math majors, that’s 8 years and $16,000 dollars. Brother two starts where his bother left off. He invests starting at age 27, puts $2,000 dollars a year into an investment, which again, is only $166 a month. The only difference is that he continues until he is sixty five years old! The first brother only put money in for 8 years, until he was 26. The second brother put money in for 38 years, from 27 until 65. This is the lesson for starting now and appreciating compound interest: Brother One, who only invested for a short time, but started earlier, at age 65, will be ahead of brother two, who invested for 38 years and a lot more money, by $750,000 dollars! This assumes a 10% return for both brothers but the point is the same: start now!

Do you really need that next purchase? Do you really need to go out to eat that much? Do you really want to keep a balance on your credit card? A day of reckoning is coming. Will you be ready? Pad the savings account, contribute to your company 401(k) plan, and max out a Roth IRA, for both you and your spouse (and if you can afford it, open a Roth for each of your kids — they’ll love you for it when they turn 59 and a half!).

When we are free from our financial troubles, we can be better stewards of our money. Ultimately, we learn that our money isn’t ours anyway, its God’s. He has blessed us with the finances we have and gives us all we own. When we gain freedom, we are free to then give our money to others. Starting with giving a tithe (a tenth) to God, we thank Him for his rich blessing on us. After that, we are free to do other generous things like help the poor, give great Christmas and birthday gifts to others, and do random acts of kindness. That is what true freedom is all about!

Where to go from here?

Click here to read some simple ways to get started saving and setting goals, according to Dave Ramsey.

Click here to read about some great ways to save money on everyday things in everyday ways. It is written by Ken Rockwell.

Open an online savings account yesterday.

Don’t be afraid of credit cards, just make sure you pay them off each month. I know that lots of advisors, like Ramsey, say to cut them up, but that only masks the problem of credit cards. We shouldn’t solve our credit problems by hiding from them, but learning how to live with them and using them to our advantage, with reward cards.

Be smart, don’t live in the present, remember the past and keep a watchful eye on the future!

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Global Warming?

The snow began on Friday, March 7th, and ended late, Saturday night. Click on the above picture to see more of what happened at our house.

My Friday started early, around 4:15 a.m. because I was flying out to Washington’s Dulles airport to be home by 3:30 p.m. that same day. Because I was scheduled to be home that night, I had no change of clothes or toiletries. Why would I need them? I hadn’t even heard of an impending snow storm, and when I heard about possible snow arriving that afternoon on the radio as I drove in to the airport that morning, I didn’t believe it would snow that much. After all, it never snows as much as the forecasters guess. If the weatherman says we’ll get three to six, I take the lower number (3) and divide it by two to see what we’ll actually get. In the three to six case, we’d probably only get and inch or an inch and a half . . . it gets me pretty close.

My crew and I were almost finished with our flying day and were in Dulles (IAD) and getting ready to pushback for our flight to Columbus (CMH). Sounds easy, right? The snow in Ohio had just begun. Everyone was boarded up, the paperwork was finished, and all we needed to do was push back from the gate to start our taxi out for takeoff. We got a frantic call over our operations radio for us to hold our push and call our dispatcher. “Uh-oh,” is all could think of to say. Sure enough, our flight was probably going to be cancelled because the visibility in Columbus was too low to land and the snow was building up on the runways faster than crews could keep it clear. We cancelled a few minutes later and had to kick all the passengers off.

This was 2 p.m. We headed to the hotel and waited for the weather to clear up. Then the 5:05 p.m. flight cancelled, then the 10:00 p.m. flight cancelled, then the 7:45 a.m. flight the next morning cancelled, as did the 12:15 p.m., 5:05 p.m., and the 7:30 p.m. flight. Finally, we were able to take the 10:00 p.m. flight back to Columbus. We had a few passengers that we had abandoned the day before! I landed about 11:30 p.m., and of course, the snow had let up (so I had a boring, no fun, unchallenging approach and landing, oh well.) A Continental Airlines Boeing 737 had run off the end of the runway in the snow and ice the night before, but yours truly didn’t have such an experience.

Laura ended up hanging around all day Saturday in the house, taking a few pictures. I got home about 2:30 a.m. Sunday morning because the roads were still terrible. Church was cancelled and I was able to sleep in and catch up on sleep from the night before.

I think that storms like this are fun because they are something out of the norm. We get into our regular routines and life becomes so boring because the same things take place each day. Blizzards bring about new experiences and visual memories that last a lifetime — not the standard drive to work. I love staying inside and drinking some hot coffee or hot chocolate and watching the snow fall and then pile up into large drifts around the landscape. I hear so many people complain about the weather and don’t want it to snow, or get upset when it does. People, it’s winter! I do feel that Al Gore owes me an apology: I just shoveled 18 inches of global warming out of my driveway! But it was fun, none the less, and I, as a Texan, always enjoy a good snow.

Click here to see more pictures of the snow around the house.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Saying Goodbye

Laura had to say goodbye today to her 2001 Mazda Protege. It was sad for both of us because we were attached to that car.

She bought it new, it ran well, was very reliable, she drove it while we met and got married, and it has never skipped a beat. We have beat on it a few times and it has never complained. “Black Beauty” has served us well and we hate to say goodbye. Unfortunately, goodbye means “good-buy.” With the insurance money Black Beauty is bringing us, we can better afford the Hyundai Sonata we bought, as the Mazda replacement. We hate to get rid of it, as it is a fun, around-town type of car. We just know, though, that if we put more money into it, it will continue to swallow our dollars in the future.

Do you get attached to things like I do? How about your car? If you had to get rid of it, would you take it for one last drive? Would you walk though the house you are selling one last time? Would you be sad to throw out an old toy? I’m very sentimental and abhor getting rid of anything, but alas, sometimes, it must be done.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

A New Car!

We found a great deal on a 2007 Hyundai Sonata that only had 11,000 miles on it. We had a little accident with Laura’s 2001 Mazda Protege and had to get rid of it. We took the insurance money that we received and put it toward the new car. Well, new car to us, but one year old. I tell ya, I’m finished taking the huge hit on new car depreciation. From now on, we will let someone else pay for the new car smell and we’ll cash in on the savings. For 11,000 miles, we paid $7,500 dollars less than sticker!

It has a nice V6 engine, alloy wheels, and very low miles! We like the warranty that comes with all Hyundais, and suggest that if you are in the market for a new car, at least check out the Hyundai. They have the reliability of a Toyota or Honda, but without the high price because of the name.

You can see some more pictures of the car here. You can check out Hyundai cars here. A nice lady that used to go to our church sold us the car off of a Saturn dealer’s lot. We also suggest buying a used car that is on another automaker’s lot, because they may very well want to more happily get rid of it. We also got a CarFax report on the vin number, so we could guarantee the history of the car was clean. It was and we are happy campers! See you on the road . . .

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

Sled Drivers

This is long, and if you don’t like airplane stories, you may want to skip it. But, it is an exhilarating read, no matter who you are . . .

In April 1986, following an attack on American soldiers in a Berlin disco, President Reagan ordered the bombing of Muammar Qaddafi’s terrorist camps in Libya. My duty was to fly over Libya and take photos recording the damage our F-111s had inflicted. Qaddafi had established a “line of death,” a territorial marking across the Gulf of Sidra, swearing to shoot down any intruder that crossed the boundary. On the morning of April 15, I rocketed past the line at 2,125 mph.

I was piloting the SR-71 spy plane, the world’s fastest jet, accompanied by Maj. Walter Watson, the aircraft’s reconnaissance systems officer (RSO). We had crossed into Libya and were approaching our final turn over the bleak desert landscape when Walter informed me that he was receiving missile launch signals. I quickly increased our speed, calculating the time it would take for the weapons-most likely SA-2 and SA-4 surface-to-air missiles capable of Mach 5-to reach our altitude.

I estimated that we could beat the rocket-powered missiles to the turn and stayed our course, betting our lives on the plane’s performance.

After several agonizingly long seconds, we made the turn and blasted toward the Mediterranean. “You might want to pull it back,” Walter suggested. It was then that I noticed I still had the throttles full forward. The plane was flying a mile every 1.6 seconds, well above our Mach 3.2 limit. It was the fastest we would ever fly. I pulled the throttles to idle just south of Sicily, but we still overran the refueling tanker awaiting us over Gibraltar.

Scores of significant aircraft have been produced in the 100 years of flight following the achievements of the Wright brothers, which we celebrate in December. Aircraft such as the Boeing 707, the F-86 Sabre Jet, and the P-51 Mustang are among the important machines that have flown our skies. But the SR-71, also known as the Blackbird, stands alone as a significant contributor to Cold War victory and as the fastest plane ever-and only 93 Air Force pilots ever steered the “sled,” as we called our aircraft.

As inconceivable as it may sound, I once discarded the plane. Literally, my first encounter with the SR-71 came when I was 10 years old in the form of molded black plastic in a Revell kit. Cementing together the long fuselage parts proved tricky, and my finished product looked less than menacing. Glue, oozing from the seams, discolored the black plastic. It seemed ungainly alongside the fighter planes in my collection, and I threw it away.

Twenty-nine years later, I stood awe-struck in a Beale Air Force Base hangar, staring at the very real SR-71 before me. I had applied to fly the world’s fastest jet and was receiving my first walk-around of our nation’s most prestigious aircraft. In my previous 13 years as an Air Force fighter pilot, I had never seen an aircraft with such presence. At 107 feet long, it appeared big, but far from ungainly. Ironically, the plane was dripping, much like the misshapen model I had assembled in my youth. Fuel was seeping through the joints, raining down on the hangar floor. At Mach 3, the plane would expand several inches because of the severe temperature, which could heat the leading edge of the wing to 1,100 degrees. To prevent cracking, expansion joints had been built into the plane. Sealant resembling rubber glue covered the seams, but when the plane was subsonic, fuel would leak through the joints.

The SR-71 was the brainchild of Kelly Johnson, the famed Lockheed designer who created the P-38, the F-104 Starfighter, and the U-2. After the Soviets shot down Gary Powers’ U-2 in 1960, Johnson began to develop an aircraft that would fly three miles higher and five times faster than the spy plane-and still be capable of photographing your license plate. However, flying at 2,000 mph would create intense heat on the aircraft’s skin. Lockheed engineers used a titanium alloy to construct more than 90 percent of the SR-71, creating special tools and manufacturing procedures to hand-build each of the 40 planes. Special heat-resistant fuel, oil, and hydraulic fluids that would function at 85,000 feet and higher also had to be developed.

In 1962, the first Blackbird successfully flew, and in 1966, the same year I graduated from high school, the Air Force began flying operational SR-71 missions.

I came to the program in 1983 with a sterling record and a recommendation from my commander, completing the weeklong interview and meeting Walter, my partner for the next four years. He would ride four feet behind me, working all the cameras, radios, and electronic jamming equipment. I joked that if we were ever captured, he was the spy and I was just the driver. He told me to keep the pointy end forward.

We trained for a year, flying out of Beale AFB in California, Kadena Airbase in Okinawa, and RAF Mildenhall in England. On a typical training mission, we would take off near Sacramento, refuel over Nevada, accelerate into Montana, obtain high Mach over Colorado, turn right over New Mexico, speed across the Los Angeles Basin, run up the West Coast, turn right at Seattle, then return to Beale. Total flight time: two hours and 40 minutes.

One day, high above Arizona, we were monitoring the radio traffic of all the mortal airplanes below us. First, a Cessna pilot asked the air traffic controllers to check his ground speed. “Ninety knots,” ATC replied. A twin Bonanza soon made the same request. “One-twenty on the ground,” was the reply. To our surprise, a navy F-18 came over the radio with a ground speed check. I knew exactly what he was doing. Of course, he had a ground speed indicator in his cockpit, but he wanted to let all the bug-smashers in the valley know what real speed was. “Dusty 52, we show you at 620 on the ground,” ATC responded.

The situation was too ripe. I heard the click of Walter’s mike button in the rear seat. In his most innocent voice, Walter startled the controller by asking for a ground speed check from 81,000 feet, clearly above controlled airspace. In a cool, professional voice, the controller replied, “Aspen 20, I show you at 1,982 knots on the ground.” We did not hear another transmission on that frequency all the way to the coast.

The Blackbird always showed us something new, each aircraft possessing its own unique personality. In time, we realized we were flying a national treasure. When we taxied out of our revetments for takeoff, people took notice. Traffic congregated near the airfield fences, because everyone wanted to see and hear the mighty SR-71. You could not be a part of this program and not come to love the airplane. Slowly, she revealed her secrets to us as we earned her trust.

One moonless night, while flying a routine training mission over the Pacific, I wondered what the sky would look like from 84,000 feet if the cockpit lighting were dark. While heading home on a straight course, I slowly turned down all of the lighting, reducing the glare and revealing the night sky. Within seconds, I turned the lights back up, fearful that the jet would know and somehow punish me. But my desire to see the sky overruled my caution, and I dimmed the lighting again. To my amazement, I saw a bright light outside my window. As my eyes adjusted to the view, I realized that the brilliance was the broad expanse of the Milky Way, now a gleaming stripe across the sky. Where dark spaces in the sky had usually existed, there were now dense clusters of sparkling stars. Shooting stars flashed across the canvas every few seconds. It was like a fireworks display with no sound.

I knew I had to get my eyes back on the instruments, and reluctantly I brought my attention back inside. To my surprise, with the cockpit lighting still off, I could see every gauge, lit by starlight. In the plane’s mirrors, I could see the eerie shine of my gold spacesuit incandescently illuminated in a celestial glow. I stole one last glance out the window. Despite our speed, we seemed still before the heavens, humbled in the radiance of a much greater power.

For those few moments, I felt a part of something far more significant than anything we were doing in the plane. The sharp sound of Walt’s voice on the radio brought me back to the tasks at hand as I prepared for our descent.

The SR-71 was an expensive aircraft to operate. The most significant cost was tanker support, and in 1990, confronted with budget cutbacks, the Air Force retired the SR-71. The Blackbird had outrun nearly 4,000 missiles, not once taking a scratch from enemy fire. On her final flight, the Blackbird, destined for the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, sped from Los Angeles to Washington in 64 minutes, averaging 2,145 mph and setting four speed records.

The SR-71 served six presidents, protecting America for a quarter of a century. Unbeknownst to most of the country, the plane flew over North Vietnam, Red China, North Korea, the Middle East, South Africa, Cuba, Nicaragua, Iran, Libya, and the Falkland Islands. On a weekly basis, the SR-71 kept watch over every Soviet nuclear submarine and mobile missile site, and all of their troop movements. It was a key factor in winning the Cold War.

I am proud to say I flew about 500 hours in this aircraft. I knew her well. She gave way to no plane, proudly dragging her sonic boom through enemy backyards with great impunity.

She defeated every missile, outran every MiG, and always brought us home. In the first 100 years of manned flight, no aircraft was more remarkable.

With the Libyan coast fast approaching now, Walt asks me for the third time if I think the jet will get to the speed and altitude we want in time. I tell him yes. I know he is concerned. He is dealing with the data; that’s what engineers do, and I am glad he is. But I have my hands on the stick and throttles and can feel the heart of a thoroughbred, running now with the power and perfection she was designed to possess. I also talk to her. Like the combat veteran she is, the jet senses the target area and seems to prepare herself. For the first time in two days, the inlet door closes flush and all vibration is gone. We’ve become so used to the constant buzzing that the jet sounds quiet now in comparison. The Mach correspondingly increases slightly and the jet is flying in that confidently smooth and steady style we have so often seen at these speeds. We reach our target altitude and speed, with five miles to spare.

Entering the target area, in response to the jet’s new-found vitality, Walt says, “That’s amazing” and with my left hand pushing two throttles farther forward, I think to myself that there is much they don’t teach in engineering school.

Out my left window, Libya looks like one huge sandbox. A featureless brown terrain stretches all the way to the horizon. There is no sign of any activity. Then Walt tells me that he is getting lots of electronic signals, and they are not the friendly kind.

The jet is performing perfectly now, flying better than she has in weeks. She seems to know where she is. She likes the high Mach, as we penetrate deeper into Libyan airspace. Leaving the footprint of our sonic boom across Benghazi, I sit motionless, with stilled hands on throttles and the pitch control, my eyes glued to the gauges. Only the Mach indicator is moving, steadily increasing in hundredths, in a rhythmic consistency similar to the long distance runner who has caught his second wind and picked up the pace.

The jet was made for this kind of performance and she wasn’t about to let an errant inlet door make her miss the show. With the power of forty locomotives, we puncture the quiet African sky and continue farther south across a bleak landscape.

Walt continues to update me with numerous reactions he sees on the DEF panel. He is receiving missile tracking signals. With each mile we traverse, every two seconds, I become more uncomfortable driving deeper into this barren and hostile land.

I am glad the DEF panel is not in the front seat. It would be a big distraction now, seeing the lights flashing. In contrast, my cockpit is “quiet” as the jet purrs and relishes her new-found strength, continuing to slowly accelerate. The spikes are full aft now, tucked twenty-six inches deep into the nacelles. With all inlet doors tightly shut, at 3.24 Mach, the J-58s are more like ramjets now, gulping 100,000 cubic feet of air per second. We are a roaring express now, and as we roll through the enemy’s backyard, I hope our speed continues to defeat the missile radars below.

We are approaching a turn, and this is good. It will only make it more difficult for any launched missile to solve the solution for hitting our aircraft. I push the speed up at Walt’s request. The jet does not skip a beat, nothing fluctuates, and the cameras have a rock steady platform.

Walt received missile launch signals. Before he can say anything else, my left hand instinctively moves the throttles yet farther forward. My eyes are glued to temperature gauges now, as I know the jet will willingly go to speeds that can harm her.

The temps are relatively cool and from all the warm temps we’ve encountered thus far, this surprises me but then, it really doesn’t surprise me. Mach 3.31 and Walt are quiet for the moment.

I move my gloved finger across the small silver wheel on the autopilot panel which controls the aircraft’s pitch. With the deft feel known to Swiss watchmakers, surgeons, and “dinosaurs” (old-time pilots who not only fly an airplane but “feel it”) I rotate the pitch wheel somewhere between one-sixteenth and one-eighth inch, location a position which yields the 500-foot-per-minute climb I desire. The jet raises her nose one-sixth of a degree and knows I’ll push her higher as she goes faster. The Mach continues to rise, but during this segment of our route, I am in no mood to pull throttles back.

Walt’s voice pierces the quiet of my cockpit with the news of more missile launch signals. The gravity of Walter’s voice tells me that he believes the signals to be a more valid threat than the others. Within seconds he tells me to “push it up” and I firmly press both throttles against their stops. For the next few seconds I will let the jet go as fast as she wants. 

A final turn is coming up and we both know that if we can hit that turn at this speed, we most likely will defeat any missiles. We are not there yet, though, and I’m wondering if Walt will call for a defensive turn off our course. With no words spoken, I sense Walter is thinking in concert with me about maintaining our programmed course.

To keep from worrying, I glance outside, wondering if I’ll be able to visually pick up a missile aimed at us. Odd are the thoughts that wander through one’s mind in times like these. I found myself recalling the words of former SR-71 pilots who were fired upon while flying missions over North Vietnam. They said the few errant missile detonations they were able to observe from the cockpit looked like implosions rather than explosions.

This was due to the great speed at which the jet was hurling away from the exploding missile. I see nothing outside except the endless expanse of a steel blue sky and the broad patch of tan earth far below.

I have only had my eyes out of the cockpit for seconds, but it seems like many minutes since I have last checked the gauges inside. Returning my attention inward, I glance first at the miles counter telling me how many more to go until we can start our turn. Then I note the Mach, and passing beyond 3.45, I realize that Walter and I have attained new personal records. The Mach continues to increase. The ride is incredibly smooth.

There seems to be a confirmed trust now, between me and the jet; she will not hesitate to deliver whatever speed we need, and I can count on no problems with the inlets. Walt and I are ultimately depending on the jet now – more so than normal – and she seems to know it. The cooler outside temperatures have awakened the spirit born into her years ago, when men dedicated to excellence took the time and care to build her well. With spikes and doors as tight as they can get we are racing against the time it could take a missile to reach our altitude. It is a race this jet will not let us lose. The Mach eases to 3.5 as we crest 80,000 feet. We are a bullet now – except faster.

We hit the turn, and I feel some relief as our nose swings away from a country we have seen quite enough of. Screaming past Tripoli, our phenomenal speed continues to rise, and the screaming Sled pummels the enemy one more time, laying down a parting sonic boom.

In seconds, we can see nothing but the expansive blue of the Mediterranean. I realize that I still have my left hand full-forward and we’re continuing to rocket along in maximum afterburner. The TDI now shows us Mach numbers not only new to our experience but flat out scary. Walt says the DEF panel is now quiet and I know it is time to reduce our incredible speed. I pull the throttles to the min ‘burner range and the jet still doesn’t want to slow down. Normally, the Mach would be affected immediately when making such a large throttle movement. But for just a few moments, old 960 just sat out there at the high Mach she seemed to love and, like the proud Sled she was, only began to slow when we were well out of danger.

I loved that jet.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!

10th Annual 20th Birthday

My Parents came up to visit from Texas to help Laura and me celebrate my Birthday. They both work full-time, so they aren’t able to get up to visit very often. Them just being here makes for a great birthday gift!

We visited the Franklin Park Conservatory and had a good time. I enjoyed taking photos with my new Nikon D40. The photos are here, in our photos albums page.  Or just click the picture to be taken to our photos page.

My birthday photos are here.

For more, visit TobyLaura.com!