November 20, 2009 3:01 PM

Dave Goes to the "Edge of the Earth"

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Dave trained all this week for the ride of a lifetime in a U-2 spy plane in "The Early Show"'s "Edge of the Earth" series. The day of his flight finally came Thursday. He flew to 70,000 feet -- the outskirts of the earth's atmosphere. He finally got to see the Earth's curvature.

The sky was clear at dawn. Dave's pilot, Luke Lokowich, said it was a "great" day to fly.

However, although it was a great day to fly, Dave pointed out, you can't just hop in a plane when you're going as high as man can go without heading into space; you have to go through what he called a "painstaking process" to prepare.

Suited up and breathing pure oxygen, Dave reached the point of no return when he entered the U-2 for his flight. Dave said adrenaline was pumping through him when he felt the throttle push him forward.

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Dave shot nearly straight up into the sky -- on his way to the outskirts of the Earth's atmosphere.

Lokowich said, "Lets go touch the sky shall we?"

"Let's do it," Dave said.

As the plane ascended, Dave said, "You feel like you're going up in a shuttle. What a view!"

Lokowich said, "Oh, it's only just begun."

As the plane reached higher and higher into the sky, Dave said, "You glance at the altimeter and take a minute to look outside, and you have gone up another 10,000 feet."

With the plane reaching heights commercial airplanes never reach, Dave said everything is more of a challenge -- including whistling.

Lokowich said, "Go ahead and try to whistle."

As Dave tried, he said, "Is my mouth dry?"

"No you just can't whistle," Lokowich said. "Something with the cabin altitude above 22,000 feet."

At one point in the flight, Lokowich said the temperature was minus 61 degrees Celsius outside -- almost negative 60 degrees Fahrenheit -- less than an inch away.

"You get so wrapped up in the beauty and novelty of all of this that it's easy to forget the danger," Dave said.

According to Lokowich, if he and Dave were to go through rapid decompression right now at 70,000 feet, their blood would boil instantly, and they would die.

As Dave approached 70,000 feet, he could actually see the curvature of Earth on the horizon.

"That is amazing, unbelievable," Dave said.

Dave recalled after the flight, "There is a peaceful beauty below you, bright sunshine on your face and a rich dark sky above."

Lokowich said, "There is so much quiet it's so, so smooth. It's so peaceful, we're just looking down on this Mother Earth, it's as if there are no problems. It makes you want to fight to protect it every day."

"It gets no better than this," Dave said.

However, just as Dave said he was teased with being the highest person in the world - higher than anyone else, but the astronauts, gravity called him home.

Dave thanked the men and women at the Beale Air Force Base, in Roseville, Calif., saying, "Thank you each and every one of you, not just for that experience, but for what you do on my behalf of me and my family each and every day thank you."

As for the experience, overall, Dave said this has been one of the hardest assignments he's ever had.

"Not because it was so difficult to do, but because it was so difficult to put these experiences in to words," he said. "I just sat there for most of this trip in awe and in silence. And when we got back down here and started looking at the tape, I just didn't say much."

Dave said he was very thankful to have flown in a plane that's so exclusive. He remarked that fewer people fly the U-2 than have Super Bowl rings.

As Dave was in the plane, he told "Early Show" co-anchor Harry Smith, he thought about lots of things, such as the astronauts in the International Space Station, his faith, God, and what's happening on Earth.

"(I thought about) how peaceful everything looks below versus the reality of what exists," he said. "And you're just dumbstruck by the beauty of the planet we live on. It gives you a completely different perspective as you descend and land on earth."

Dave said he said he realized how small human beings are.

He said, "You're above the planes that fly, you're above all that runs around and makes life chaotic. And you just -- you stand there and it puts thing into -- for lack of a better term an ultra perspective -- how small we are, how tiny we are, indeed how tiny this planet is when you compare it to everything above the canopy that you're in."


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Add a Comment
by TNStevieRayVaughanfan November 23, 2009 6:09 PM EST
Dave, Dave, Dave...I am sooooooooooo jealous!
My father's hobby was RC model planes.
He always wanted to be a pilot but never got to realize his dream.
I too have always be fascinated by planes and have a need for speed, I admit to that.
But to get a once in a life time opportunity to be aboard a U2..you are a damn lucky man!
PPPPPPPBBBBBBBBBBBBTTTTTTTTTT!!!
I will live vicariously thru your pictures and video.
I was at the Cape when they lauched the first space shuttle and I peeded my pants because I was so excited.
For the U2, I would need depends. LOL!!!
Reply to this comment
by wailuawendy November 21, 2009 1:52 AM EST
Dave, thank you for allowing me to vicariously experience the thrill of visiting space with you! What a ride!
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by frank8801 November 20, 2009 9:16 PM EST
Dave, That was a great ride to the edge of space. Back in 1955 Joe Kittenger went up to 76,400 in the Man High Ballon. He was one of the first Air Force high-altitude jumpers. What a veiw from up there.
Reply to this comment
by raymondovich November 20, 2009 7:33 PM EST
Remarkable to think this is same basic craft dating back to JFK. As a spy plane it was capable of flying over Portland Oregon and identify motor vehicles in Seattle Washington.
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by commemorative November 20, 2009 2:51 PM EST
For those concerned about tax dollars? Your tax dollars were not wasted. Each pilot must maintain x number of flying hours and everyperson involved must maintain their proficiency. Dave was a passenger on a training flight. The U2 is one of the least expensive aircraft to maintain in the USAF inventory. Good job Dave and a job well done for the men and woment of Beale AFB. Thanks for the memories.
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by commemorative November 20, 2009 2:44 PM EST
Dave,

That was a beautiful ride. Earth is a beautiful planet and the outer edge of space is like heaven, its too bad you had to come back to the ground where everything is so different. "Pinon" for life.
Reply to this comment
by RedWings_ninety_one November 20, 2009 1:07 PM EST
I guess he can better predict the weather by eyesight out there.
Reply to this comment
by Blatensphere November 20, 2009 12:18 PM EST
"minus 61 degrees Celsius outside -- almost negative 60 degrees Fahrenheit"
________________________________________

Um, -61 C = -77.8 F. Way to go CBS.
Reply to this comment
by bundye November 20, 2009 11:19 AM EST
Dave gets all the breaks and experiences...hang in there Dave!
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