GreyOwl
Nov 4, 01, 9:26 pm
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Here is an interesting problem. Perhaps one of our FT pilots could enlighten me.
First, an introduction. Some members of the Jewish Faith can trace their ancestral roots back to Ahron, brother of Moses, the first Kohen (as in Cohen) or Biblical Priest.
As the Torah-Bible clearly states in Leviticus Chapter 21, a Kohen can not come into contact with a dead person except for an immediate relative.
In any case...................It seems that flights leaving Tel Aviv, fly over a cemetery in Holon, creating a problem for any Kohen in flight.
Now, here is my question. I know from the approaches into YYZ ( often over my house) that no two approaches are identical until the planes get within the last two or three miles of the runway.
Is it safe to assume that no two flights take exactly the same path on take-off or do they in fact usually follow exactly the same "roadway in the sky?"
Is anyone aware of a site that actually tracks flight paths or where one could find any useful information on this unusual problem?
Here is an interesting problem. Perhaps one of our FT pilots could enlighten me.
First, an introduction. Some members of the Jewish Faith can trace their ancestral roots back to Ahron, brother of Moses, the first Kohen (as in Cohen) or Biblical Priest.
As the Torah-Bible clearly states in Leviticus Chapter 21, a Kohen can not come into contact with a dead person except for an immediate relative.
In any case...................It seems that flights leaving Tel Aviv, fly over a cemetery in Holon, creating a problem for any Kohen in flight.
Now, here is my question. I know from the approaches into YYZ ( often over my house) that no two approaches are identical until the planes get within the last two or three miles of the runway.
Is it safe to assume that no two flights take exactly the same path on take-off or do they in fact usually follow exactly the same "roadway in the sky?"
Is anyone aware of a site that actually tracks flight paths or where one could find any useful information on this unusual problem?