I recently had a chance to make my first visit to Florida for an aviation enthusiast meetup ("avgeek" is a bad word in the Miami clique), which included a dinner and spotting at Miami and Fort Lauderdale. I traveled with fellow Twin Cities plane spotter John Wetter, who I met way back in my storm-chasing days, and has been a JetTip beta tester since the start. In addition to to the official FLAP festivities, we also took some time to spot at Orlando and Key West.
Day 1: MSP-MCO
The first day of the trip was straight-forward: get from Minneapolis to Orlando. My flight, Delta 1744 (B753), left at 6:15 PM, but an early arrival at MSP allowed a few minutes of spotting from the Concourse D Observation Deck. I've spent a lot of time spotting at MSP, but as a fairly infrequent flyer, I hadn't yet had the chance to get to this location, which is behind security. It was quiet, away from the crowds, and offered nice views of 12L/30R - it was surprisingly nice! It requires shooting through glass, though it was nice to be out of the weather.
A late flight meant arriving in Florida after dark, and being anxious to get the rental car and get to the hotel in Titusville meant there weren't any worthwhile photos taken on our first night there.
Day 2: NASA & MCO
While not purely an avgeek stop, I'd imagine most folks into aviation would thoroughly enjoy making time for the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, which is about 45 minutes away from MCO. We visited on a cool, rainy Wednesday morning, so crowds were minimal - it felt like we had the place to ourselves. The amount of cool stuff on display really warrants a few blog posts, suffice it to say walking around a Saturn V, the Vehicle Assembly Building, and a Space Shuttle is an amazing experience.
While we could have easily spent more time at NASA, but the evening arrivals from two of Florida's three passenger 747 operators at Orlando were calling us. Since 17L/35R was closed for maintenance, my original plans for shooting from the Silver Airways lot were foiled; fortunately for us, the international heavies were coming in on 35L, and the skies were overcast, so shooting from the side of Heintzelman Boulevard worked out pretty well. I'm a sucker for arrival shots showing off the big plume of smoke as the wheels make contact - this was a perfect spot!
After witnessing a spectacular sunset, and 777 movements from British Airways and LATAM, along with a good amount of activity from JetBlue, American, Southwest, Delta, Alaska, and Frontier, it was time to move along. We were also informed by a very courteous member of Florida's law enforcement community that spotting from Heintzelman Boulevard is not permitted; I've since read MCO actively discourages spotting outside of the fence in non-designated areas, but, is happy to host spotters from the top of their parking ramp - good information for the next visit!
Day 3: First Visit to MIA and FLAP Dinner
After making the four hour drive down to Miami, we joined up with the first official activity of the FLAP 2019 meetup - spotting at El Dorado, which is a nice spot at the end of a dead-end road near the west end of MIA's runway 9; a great spot for shooting the arrivals of traffic from the south, some international heavies, and is the runway designated for use by A380's (which are sent by Air France, British Airways, and Lufthansa).
Just as my first visit to LAX was completely overwhelming, so too was my first evening at MIA. A Lufthansa A346, the Swift 737 in the Eastern homage livery. 747 freighters from Polar/DHL, Cargolux and Atlas Air. World Atlantic MD80's, various aircraft in liveries from Avianca, LAN, TAM, and LATAM. Iberia A330, Cayman Airways B38M, Qatar A350, and on and on and on. A parade of aircraft that would qualify as the "catch of the year" back home at MSP.
As the sun went down, we all headed to the MIA Hotel, where the FLAP committee had arranged an excellent dinner. We reviewed the plans for the upcoming airport tours, enjoyed a presentation from Atlantic Models' Roger Jarman, received some tasteful swag (including limited edition, FLAP 2019 / JetTip stickers and key chains), and gave away a bunch of door prizes.
Day 4: MIA Ramp Tour
MIA generously provided a pair of buses and staff to babysit the FLAP group as it toured the airfield from noon until about 6:30 PM. Both buses took different paths through the airfield, providing unique photo opportunities to each half of the group. The first part of my tour visited various aircraft parked on the north end of the airport.
Once we'd had our fill of oddball aircraft on the north end, we got into position for the arrival of the Tap Portugal retro jet near the west end of runway 12, which handles most of the arrivals coming from the north. We were on the field and very close to the runway as part of the tour, however we weren't terribly far from "the holes," which is a publicly accessible vantage point.
Day 5: Ft. Lauderdale & Key West
The FLAP group met bright and early for a morning of spotting at Ft. Luaderdale, which is the other main international airport in the Miami area, and is where you'll need to go if you want to see Allegiant, Spirit, Southwest or JetBlue; while it might be easy for US-based spotters to take those airlines for granted, with FLAP participants coming from over a dozen countries, the demand was high!
After official spotting activities wrapped up at FLL around lunchtime, John and I made the spontaneous decision to make the drive down to Key West, with hopes of seeing some Coast Guard and/or Navy activity... we didn't manage to find any, and just before sunset, we stumbled across some avgeek gold...
Day 6: FLL-JFK-MSP
Our trip came to an end with an early flight out of Ft. Lauderdale, where we'd fly to New York's JFK and catch our connection back home to MSP. I had modest hopes of seeing something interesting from the windows near our gate (we didn't have much time between flights), but we ended up doing pretty well!
What a fantastic trip! If you're interested in attending FLAP 2020, keep an eye on the Florida Aviation Photography group on Facebook.
Thanks again to the organizing committee for their efforts and MIA and FLL for supporting the hobby. If you're looking for a solid avgeek vacation, I can't recommend South Florida highly enough!
Nick Benson
Nick lives in Burnsville, Minnesota with his wife and three children. He grooves on railroad and aviation photography, politics, geography, weather, and LEGO. He started JetTip's smart flight alert service in 2017, and is now a full-time avgeek. He can frequently be found atop a step ladder at MSP's Aircraft Viewing Area.
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