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"C17 Elephant Walk" original watercolor on 260lb Arches by Carrie Waller |
Hi Everyone,
I'm tired this Monday!!!! I stayed up almost all night last night painting my newest painting, which I'm keeping a secret a bit longer, actually I have posted some wip pics on fb so please join me there to see as I go
http://www.facebook.com/carriewallerfineart. I'd love it if you would like my page, it makes me feel special:))
Since I'm still in wip mode on my current painting I'm sharing a painting I did as a Christmas painting for my husband. These are the C17aircraft he worked with at Charleston, AFB in South Carolina. They were doing an elephant walk.
"Elephant walk" is a uniquely Air Force
term that grew out of World War II and became institutional memory in
the new Air Force. The Army Air Forces had the luxury of large amounts
of bombers by 1944, and would regularly generate attacks in excess of
1,000 aircraft from its Numbered Air Forces. Observers commented that
the nose-to-tail, single-file taxi movements of the heavily-laden
bombers paralleled the nose-to-tail trail of lumbering elephants on
their way to the next watering hole. The term stuck and was even used to
define maximum sortie surge operations in Air Force regulations.
In modern times, the "elephant walk" came
to mean a maximum sortie generation in Strategic Air Command. Elephant
walks also became a part of Inspector General Exercises, and sometimes
were only a taxi exercise without actual departures and landings. It was
a terrific way to inspect all aspects of a wing's readiness to meet its
wartime mission. Every flyable, tasked aircraft and crew was required
to meet its war plan departure window.
It's pretty amazing to see in person so I decided to capture it in watercolor as well. He loved it and it's now proudly displayed in his office:)
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Brian and his painting Christmas morning |
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Carrie