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Getting Above It All in Albuquerque


Article # : 11651 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 9 / 1986  1,545 Words
Author : Carl and Ann Purcell
Carl and Ann Purcell have traveled on assignment over three million miles to eighty-six different countries. They both write columns for newspapers in the United States and Canada.

       The old Toyota lurched and bounced across the washboard road leading into the launch site at Cutter Field in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the headlights stabbing into the cold pre-dawn darkness. A young woman with an illuminated baton waved us into the crew parking area between a pickup truck and a Winnebago. We sat for several minutes, our breath fogging the windows, and drank black coffee from a thermos. The hot liquid drove the cobwebs of sleep from our minds as we an anticipated the event we had flown over 4,000 miles to see.
       
        It seemed an anachronism that we had arrived in Albuquerque aboard a TWA DC-9 to observe and participate in the earliest and most elementary form of manned flight. This was the annual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, one of the most spectacular events in America. Each October, Albuquerque is invaded by hundreds of balloon pilots, thousands of crew members and more than 500,000 spectators from around the world. Between 500 and 600 brightly colored and fanciful balloons take part in the fiesta. To give the event historical perspective, one of the Montgolfier Balloon, the ornate aircraft that made the first recorded passenger flight in France in 1783.
       
        Stepping out of the car, camera bags tugging at our shoulders, we were aware of the shadowy figures of crew members moving around us in the darkness. Flashlights punctuated the black velvet of the night like desert fireflies flickering across the mesa. Gondolas and vast nylon envelopes were unloaded from vans and pickup trucks. Anticipation of excitement and adventure filled the air. The distant Sandia Mountains were a wash of black ink, barely discernible against the night sky. The rim gradually turned to a glowing pink from the hidden sun. Dawn does not ... (1998 of 8821 Characters)
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