eeuunikkeiexpat wrote:The one I saw in September was mainly visible as a contrail. Only when it was leaving the area under binocular magnification did I see the pinpoint orange flame responsible for the rocket-like trail.
None of the web link images are as dramatic as what I saw two times offshore San Antonio, particularly the beginning part of the trajectory combined with sunset.
Since both came from the same direction, I think it is part of the same meteor debris cluster that approaches the planet roughly from the bottom to our WSW.
thisisreallycomplicated wrote:eeuunikkeiexpat wrote:The one I saw in September was mainly visible as a contrail. Only when it was leaving the area under binocular magnification did I see the pinpoint orange flame responsible for the rocket-like trail.
None of the web link images are as dramatic as what I saw two times offshore San Antonio, particularly the beginning part of the trajectory combined with sunset.
Since both came from the same direction, I think it is part of the same meteor debris cluster that approaches the planet roughly from the bottom to our WSW.
So I've got my tinfoil hat on, and doing a little speculating.
1. If you were trying to develop some new kind of missile that wouldn't set off missile detection alarms, could you make it behave like a meteor, and launch it to coincide with a meteor shower? Or
2. Suppose you were trying to hide missile testing from the public (or less technically advanced countries), but you knew there was no way they wouldn't notice. Would you plant some youtube videos of your missile, complete with discussions of how they're actually meteors? Something like that hide in plain site disinformation stuff.
eeuunikkeiexpat wrote:Another piece of the puzzle, remember the recent mass birdie deaths, many with broken wings washing ashore from Cartagena to Santo Domingo? Wonder if a shock wave could've done it?
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