Question: You never have told us when an X in the sky is not normal. Do you think planes paths never cross..
Answer: In Houston, a study was done on jet contrails. One of the things they found was that the average jet contrail lasted less than a minute. If that is true, then an X pattern over Westhiemer and Gessner that lasts for 2 hours could be considered un-normal based on length of time. If you can demonstrate with photos a series of pictures over an hour, I would call that un-normal. I took some pictures on the way to Austin (which has a hotter and dryer climate than Houston) and did this. You can see the results at
http://www.geocities.com/houstonchemtrails/Austin3.html
Heres another common scenio: chemtrails below cloud level. Its too hot in Houston to form jet contrails below cloud level on an average day. (clouds in Houston are typically between 5K and 10K feet, well below the 30,000ft plus you need for chemtrails)
And yet here they are:
http://www.geocities.com/houstonchemtrails/dec1102.html
What about Las Vegas? If there ever was a dry, hot environment that is not conducive to contrails of any sort, surely you wouldn't expect contrails there would you? But alas, examine those at
http://www.geocities.com/houstonchemtrails/vegas1.html
What is fascinating to me is the mammoth size of the trails in the top 2 photos. Since jet contrails occur over 30,000ft, they should appear pencil thin not like a giant train track in the sky.
A more important question concerning Vegas is why are chemtrails in Vegas at all? Of all places, this climate of hot, dry desert shouldn't fit the bill for anything.
Here is what one Vegas citizen says about these observations:
"Chemtrails are a common sight here in Las Vegas. They appear EVERY weekend without fail, the only exception being the two weeks after September 11, 2001.
An acquaintance once tried to assure me that it was just the result of heavier air traffic and atmospheric conditions. But he couldn't tell me how the atmospheric conditions were always so favorable to trails on the weekend, especially when the weather here is so consistent from one day to the next during the summer.
We stood there and counted 11 jets in the air; nine of which were leaving trails, and some that were not leaving trails were flying at a higher altitude than the ones that were. That was on Sunday. The very next day, I took him back outside for another look. That time we counted 9 planes in the air, none of which were leaving trails. How very curious. The temperature was the same, and the air traffic only slightly less. Yet the trails were gone! They came back on Thursday, of course, and stayed for the weekend once again. That was a rare Monday, though, as it is common for the trails to still be hanging around then. We almost never have chemtrails on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, but they are here Friday through Sunday like clockwork."
What should we do with this gentleman’s testimony? You decide.
Question: Find us anything from NASA or NOAA that back you up.
NASA and NOAA both say this: Jet contrails occur under the following conditions:
1. Extremely cold temperatures - -40 is the temp most start at
2. High altitudes: Usually 30,000ft and above
3. High humidity: to the point of saturation (80 percent or higher)
So when my Continental pilot tells me that the bottom of the clouds is at 2,000ft and the top is 4,000ft and I get off of the plane and look up and see jet contrails under those clouds in the shape of an X, is that normal? No.... Do you see what I'm saying... This is what people all over the country are observing.
Some of the links but not all that I have found verifying this are:
http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/Flagstaff/science/contrail.htm
http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/cld/oth/cntrl.rxml
http://130.104.105.148/Bede/EBED302000/A5-187-2000.pdf
http://www.sti.nasa.gov/Pubs/Aeroeng/eng393.pdf
http://www.greenparty.org.uk/reports/2000/meps/aviationrptdraft.htm