Awesome photos! For fifteen years I watched the Blue Angels perform on Lake Washington for Seafair. We'd be out in the boat, waterskiing in the Bayliner or perhaps the little aluminum boat trolling for sockeye or trout.... then, about three days before Seafair, one or two of them (A4 Skyhawks, later F/A 18s) would just come rushing in quite low on the water .... utterly quiet (notice how those guys on the sailboat are totally oblivious to the F/A 18 right behind/over them? That is because those planes are so fast and quiet when they go by. Then you hear it..... that incredible thuderous sound like the tearing of a rotten sheet that magnifies impossibly as the the roar does come, following that plane several hundred yards behind it.
I disagree with the photogapher on the distortion. It is caused by exhaust heat refracting the light like a mirage. You can see the same thing behind any jet parked on a runway, or over a hot parking lot, and nothing is going over 780 mph. there. What the speed of the air as it passes the plane will do is release its water vapor, creating the micro-cloud burst // halo effect sometimes seen around the wing edges or cockpit.
Also, notice the water beneath the jet? It is all white and stirred up. We saw this numerous times as they ripped past. When really low, like in some of these pics, when the pilot snaps his stick back and yanks that plane vertical, it pulls up two huge, several hundred foot high waterspouts with it! I wish he'd captured that with the camera too, but being so zoomed in, probably didn't see it. Has anyone else seen that?
Another favorite is when the F/A 18s - with their two powerful engines, go by in an extremely slow, nearly at full stall speed pass (about 70 mph) the plane inclined at about 75 degrees, using engine thrust more than wings for lift. And they can hold that for over a mile like that. And then, when ready to level out, do they drop the nose and simultaneously punch the throttle to speed up? No, they just punch it with the nose held high and the plane goes up on the same vector. Amazing.
I love those AH1 Cobra attack helicopters. I watched two of the Army's version clear a rooftop of snipers with rockets (while swinging back and forth in place like a pendulum on a short string) in Colon, Panama in 1989 (Operation Just Cause). Hell unleashed, threat neutralized, just like that.
I'd love to see a Trident Nuclear Sub go by while out boating. Have any Brats been so fortunate?
C.W.