Sat, Oct 02, 2004
By Wes Oleszewski
Mojave airport has seen its share of events and crowds in the
past. The people come, gather, watch some piece of aviation history
play itself out and then they leave. Life at the airfield then
returns to its abnormal normality. But the week of the X
Prize attempt is something different. This time there are to be two
historic events taking place with a slim four-day gap in between
and Mojave would hardly have time to catch its breath.
The first storm of press, spectators and sponsors began on
Tuesday and ended late Wednesday, reaching its peak with the
successful flight of SpaceShipOne.
Once the last headline had been written and the final TV
journalist had posed for the final segment of video, things slipped
back into the normal routine at the desert airport. At the base of
the old control tower the Voyager Restaurant went back to serving
food to normal sized groups of airport employees and occasional
visitors. Down the flightline a bit, the folks at XCOR went back to
work on their plans, funding proposals and the hardware needed to
launch future space tourists. Elsewhere on the field a DC-10 is
towed into place for the purpose of salvaging parts. Scaled
Composites' people roll out Proteus and fire up its engines for
another high altitude mission.
Yet, even with all of this routine activity, Mojave is only
resting in the calm between two storms. The moment that the gear of
SpaceShipOne contacted the runway, the 14 day X Prize clock began
to tick and the second storm began approaching. The SpaceShipOne
team actually narrowed the gap between the events when they
announced that their attempt to finish the race for the X Prize
would take place just four days after their vehicle's latest
flight.

Now the Mojave airport remains poised for the next onslaught of
spectators and press. On the ramp, white tents wait empty and X
Prize parking signs have been left in place with nothing more than
blowing dust to direct. Golf carts and moving vans rest and staff
tables are idle in the hangar that is designated as temporary
headquarters for the X Prize staff. A pallet stacked with unopened
event programs sits silently and coolers recently filled with ice
and cold drinks has become a shallow pool upon which a few
discarded items float. This is the calm, the space between the
events that make history. This is the forgotten pause that eats up
squares on the calendar and is the dividing line between dates that
some future history students will have to memorize.

In just a few hours the storm will begin again only next time it
will be stronger and larger. The impression that this leg of the
SpaceShipOne mission schedule will be the one that claims the grand
prize will no doubt bring out throngs of spectators and media who
would otherwise not bother making the desert venture. The crushed
blacktop and sandy field parking lots will be weighed down with
vehicles of every sort and countless camera lenses will point
toward the heavens.
At the end of the day, in the glow of success or the vacuum of
failure a press conference will be held and the inevitable dumb
questions will be asked. When it is all over and the last reporter
has sat for the final few feet of video tape, things will slip back
into their normal routine at the desert airport called Mojave.
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