luvflyin
Touchdown! Greaser!
How do you tell the difference
Green is on my right wingtip. Green has five letters,
So does right. Left has four letters and so does port.
The whole red right returning thing is for channel markers. Returning from sea, the red marker bouy will be on the right (starboard) side.
let's say you're at OSHKOSHB'GOSH and it's 3am and you've had a little to drink, no scratch that, a lot to drink......and there you are, peeing your name in the middle of the runway and you look up and you see a green light on the left, a white lite in the middle and a red lite on the right........you best return to your tent immediately, as someone's about to squash you.
But "left" has four letters and "red" has three. I think mnemonics help people remember these things because of the effort put into memorizing the mnemonic.Green is on my right wingtip. Green has five letters,
So does right. Left has four letters and so does port.
The whole red right returning thing is for channel markers. Returning from sea, the red marker bouy will be on the right (starboard) side.
Great, now I need a mnemonic so that I remember the color order on the Mexican and Italian flagsJust think of the Mexican/Italian flight when looking face to face
Keep your stick on the ice. We're all in this together."If women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy."
Keep your stick on the ice. We're all in this together.
Spanish brings its own set of problems. Is it:of course, in spanish this is all messed up....
How do you tell the difference
How do you tell the difference
It also applies to an aircraft flying towards you, i.e., returning.The 'red right returning' is strictly for bouys in IALA B regions which only applies to pretty much the US and Japan.
"There is some Red Port Wine Left."
Every day, I use a fitted pair of in-ear audio monitors as earbuds. For that type of thing, they generally mold the right one in red plastic and the left in blue or some other color. You correlate Red with Right at a glance and then stick the thing in the correct ear.
I just remind myself that aviation and boating have it backwards.