Tikaboo Peak 19-Apr-2004
This
year's excursion to Tikaboo Peak may not have included the same level of
activity over Groom Lake as last year but was memorable in that it was the first
(and perhaps last) time that I was able to log a serial using the naked eye from
Tikaboo. Most of the time one is fiddling with high-powered telescopes, cameras
and the like carried up the 7900ft mountain and seeing aircraft at all due to
the 26 miles distance from the base is all one expects.
Below is HH-60G 91-26352 snooping around us during a security patrol; nice to
meet you guys! Next time perhaps you could pick us up and take us for a ramp
tour....or at least offer us a ride back to the 'parking lot' at the base of the
mountain.

If you have any photos of me waving I'd be most interested!
To be honest I was a little surprised to be standing on top of a mountain in one
of the remotest parts of the world being looked at very closely by the security
people from the base. It didn't seem like a good idea to wave camcorders etc at
them so I used my hand. Perhaps this was the time to wave my LAAS 'I am a
genuine plane spotter' ID card?! (For those not in the know there is an
anti-terrorist initiative that recognises that plane spotters are a good defence
against terrorist threats around airports...)
To start with I thought that the TWR were talking to a 'Skitty 34'; it was only
when the thud thud thud turned into a black speck on the valley floor later
turning into a very large HH-60G that I realised that its callsign was probably
Security 34. Having checked us out at close quarters the chopper descended into
the valley and from the rotor pitch was hovering for a couple of minutes. I
assume that they were doing a recce of our 4x4 parked in the hugely
undersubscribed Tikaboo Peak parking lot; they don't appear to have landed as
all was intact when we eventually returned.
Here's some garbled audio
security34.wav
Having headed out directly from the Groom Lake Road Guard Shack direction to
Tikaboo, they returned from their licence-plate collecting task to then fly past
us at a much more sensible distance i.e. greater than the 500ft minimum from a
person, vehicle, vessel or structure as mandated by law and returned via the
same route. They appeared to resume a more routine tour of the perimeter as they
didn't land until 25 mins later on spot DD at the base.
There was nothing too exciting on the movements front today at Groom Lake
though, just the usual Janet 737s, Beech 200s and the one remaining Beech 1900.
A change from previous visits was the use of (shorter) runway 30 which
terminates at the Hangar 18 area (the HUGE one) and is used as the taxiway from
the Janet terminal to the holding point for runway 32 (the long one). It appears
that whatever contractor personnel the small Beechs ferry around, they work in
the area south of Hangar 18 and they seem to park in the area which is allegedly
the stores for Hangars 20-23 (close to the old A-12 hangars which is where Have
Blue was too).
Much more fun is the nonsense of changing callsign when contacting Groom
approach or tower. Janet 288 becomes 'Buddy' 12 for example. The Tower
controller helpfully - in banter with one of the crews - told us that the next
month's callsign would be 'Mother'. Anyhow, the R/T discipline isn't great and
I'll spare the blushes of those involved in christian name exchanges but here is
N654BA forgetting that he is supposed to be Buddy 4.
buddy_4arr.wav
And thus Buddy 0 we heard presumably is N20RA. I haven't worked out the Janet
737 callsigns yet but in addition to the one above Buddy 93 became Janet 278.
Others heard were 09 and 69. It will be interesting to tie these up with a Janet
flight number or aircraft serial. Last year the MiG-29 was 18. And N105TB was 03
(it was also GATOR 03 at Pt Mugu but one assumes this is coincidence). A F-16
was 61.
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