In D.C., a resident tracks the flying machines hovering above on the city's 'helicopter highway' [View all]
Hat tip,someone on a scanner-listening listserv of which I am a member
Local
In D.C., a resident tracks the flying machines hovering above on the citys helicopter highway
By
Justin Wm. Moyer
November 20, 2020 at 6:00 a.m. EST
D.C. resident Andrew Logan calls his neighborhood the citys helicopter highway. Some evenings, whirlybirds of unknown origin seem to descend en masse. ... There were a lot of nights where Id wake up and these things were circling or buzzing us real low, said Logan, who lives in the Shaw neighborhood. I naturally turned to Twitter to see what they were. There was not a whole lot there.
Logan, an audio engineer by day, was quick to remedy that. At the start of the year, he launched the Twitter handle
@HelicoptersofDC as a clearinghouse for all things chopper-related. Now more than 7,700 followers strong, the account uses publicly available data to identify the sources of all that buzzing, often tweeting out photos of the choppers.
{snip}
Brooks, a D.C. resident and employee of the General Services Administration, started the website
Helicopters of DC in 2019 during the government shutdown. (Logan said Brooks was not at all offended that I stole his name, and Brooks said he considers Logan a collaborator.) Like its Twitter counterpart, the site identifies aircraft, explaining which agencies are behind which birds and their missions.
{snip}
Alan Henney, a longtime chronicler of police chatter who often beats traditional media to crime stories
on Twitter, said HelicoptersofDC ties it all together. The account provides a basic service every citizen is interested in: When someone looks up and sees something in the sky, they want to know what it is and why its there.
{snip}
Justin Wm. Moyer
Justin Wm. Moyer is a breaking news reporter for The Washington Post. After a long stint as a contributing writer at the Washington City Paper, he came to The Post in 2008, becoming an editor in Outlook and for the Morning Mix, The Post's overnight team. He became a reporter in 2015. Follow
https://twitter.com/justinwmmoyer