
"Blue Streak", F-89C from 433rd FIS
This was the base commander's plane,
photographed on a visit to Dayton, Ohio in September 1954
There are a number of memories and even a strange dream
that might be connected to the paint job on the F-89s for the 433rd
FIS.
Bird
Migration Study

Bird Migration Study
Printed in “The Capital Times” on
August 22nd, 1952
I found this article when I was reading through
newspaper archives. When I read it, I could remember that I had read the
article out loud to Bobbie, because it mentioned Louisiana State
University. What I recall is that Bobbie had suggested that maybe Gene
should volunteer. I am not sure why she would suggest this, but maybe it
was because she knew he was restless in the Air Force and needed an
outside interest to keep him happy. I don’t know if Moncla did end up
working on this project, but I somehow have a feeling that he liked birds
and did get in touch with the Audubon Society.
Bird
Watching at Truax Field
Several years before I saw the UFO in August 1999, I
had a lucid dream where I was on a high open platform with another man,
and we were watching birds. It was in an open field somewhere. Sometimes
in my lucid dreams, I seem to be very conscious about finding out where I
am or who I am or what the date is, because I seem to think that this
information will be useful to me. In this dream I was asking myself, where
am I, and I was told that this is me in Wisconsin where I had lived in a
past life. I also think that I might have been told that I was in Truax
Field, but this detail didn’t seem to sink in for some reason.
Over the years that followed, I would often think about
this dream, because it was the only one that specifically referred to a
specific past life at a specific location. I wondered how it was that I
had come up with something like that and I guess I also wondered if it
just might be true.
After I had started to experience some memory recalls
about John Schmidt, I started to remember bits about how we had met and
had found it interesting that we both had infant boys that were about the
same age. At some point, I seemed to experience a recall when I was with
John in a tower at the base, and it was us who were up in this lookout
tower looking at some hawks or falcons that were hunting.
I often wondered if there had ever been any such tower
at Truax Field as I seemed to remember. In my last visit to Madison in
August 2004, I found a picture of an F-89 that had just arrived from refit
and was one of the first two F-89s to go back on duty at Madison.

Refit F-89C Arrives at Truax Field
Note the tower in the background. The number on tail is
either 15856 or 15853. Ser. No. 51-5853 is F-89 that went missing over
Lake Superior.
When I found this photograph, I couldn’t help but
wonder if this might be the plane that Moncla and Wilson were in that
night over Lake Superior. It is either that plane, or 51-4856 which is the
last F-89C plane built.
What I also noticed about the photograph was the tower
in the background. This is just like the tower I had in my dream and was
exactly what I was looking for confirmation that this may have been based
on an incident that might have actually happened. Although this might not
sound like a big deal, it certainly was quite a discovery for me.
Painting
Blue Streak
Some of the triggering events that bring back memories
have been quite strange, and this is one such case.
This memory occurred on January 5th, 2002,
which was a wet and dreary Saturday in Surrey. I was relaxing and was
thinking about the “blue star” satellite sighting I had while on a dive
trip up in Port Hardy. I’m not sure what it was that prompted me to think
about this sighting in particular. I think at the time I was pondering a
couple of things about it, like how I thought there was significance to
the sighting. As I was thinking about this, a Stellars Jay, which has a
vivid blue color, flew up and landed on the railing of the balcony. Note
that I have had similar sightings before, but rarely more than a few every
winter. It seemed like a bit of a coincidence.
Later that day, while I was working on a drawing of the
F-89 I was thinking about the “Blue Streak” paint job on the F-89s from
the 433rd squadron in Truax AFB. For the rest of the day and
evening, I kept having a sense that I was remembering something about the
origin of the paint job.
What I seem to be remembering, is that the paint job
was inspired by some swallows or other birds that were sometimes seen
flying over Truax Field. Acting on this hunch, I looked through the
Pederson Guide to Birds of North America, that I purchased many years
back. I looked for birds that might have inspired this paint job, and I
decided that the “Purple Martin” (which has a very glossy bluish-purple
body), was maybe the inspiration. What I remember is one scene in which
one of the pilots from the 433rd (I assume this is Moncla, but
I am not sure about this), has been working on a prototype paint job on an
F-89 that is inside a hanger. He has been working all day and it is now
late in the evening. The smell of the oil-based paint is very strong, and
I think the man feels very grubby and tired. I am quite sure that this man
designed the custom paint job.
When he has finished with the paint job, he talks to
someone else about the prototype. The other man is perhaps another pilot
or perhaps more likely a captain or commander. I think the other man likes
the looks of the paint job on the plane. The artist/pilot thinks that the
F-89s should be referred to as something like “Bluebird” but the other man
disagrees, and comes up with the idea of “Blue Streak”. There is some
discussion/argument about this, but I think in the end it is agreed that
“Blue Streak” is more fitting to the image of the squadron. Part of the
reason that I think the bird inspiration may have been a Purple Martin, is
the color seems to match the color of the paint in the color photo, and
also the way the color is laid out in curves on the front and underneath
the fuselage, and on the wingtip pods. This is rather analogous to the
places that the male purple martin has its primary coloring. I am not
certain about this, but I think that the base commander was maybe Lt. Col.
Shoup. I also remember that another man froim the squadron helped with
some of the painting but left before the job was done. I think the other
man was Lt. Schmidt.
I did
later find out that the one color picture of the Blue Streak paint job
that I can find on an F-89 is actually a picture of the commander’s
aircraft for the 560th Air Defense Group that was taken
September 1954 (month I was born) at the USAF airfield in Dayton, Ohio

"Blue Streak", photo taken in Madison in 1953
There is only one other picture I know of that shows
the Blue Streak paint job on a 433rd FIS F-89. This is a black
and white photograph taken in 1953 in Madison. One thing you can tell is
that this photograph was taken after April 22nd, because the
F-89 has been refit with the little fin on the wing tip tank. The other
clue is that there are leaves on the trees, so it must be late spring to
early fall.
I know this seems like another strange recollection,
but I have a recall that it was Gene Moncla who was in the plane
when this
picture was taken the day after he had completed painting the prototype.
What I remember is that this was sort of a “rollout” for the new design,
and the photographer was there specifically to take a photograph of the
new paint job. In this memory, the pilot was quite self-conscious about
what others might be thinking about the paint job.
I don’t know if there is any validity to any of this
memory recall. Maybe it is the recall of another pilot. Maybe my mind is
just playing tricks on me. Whatever the case, I did find it odd that I had
such a vivid sense of the smell of the paint in the hangar when I
experienced the recall.
Purple
Martins
As I stated in the description of the Blue Streak
prototype paint job, I thought that maybe this was connected with purple
martins. One thing I seemed to remember is that I had seen purple martins
in Madison, and they had left a big impression on me.
One thing I remember was when I was a young boy in Fort
William, I was always looking for Purple Martins. I knew that they flew
like swallows and that they would hang out in large groups on the
telephone wires. One thing I remember is that I would point to large
groups of birds on the wires and ask my brothers if they were Purple
Martins and my brothers or parents, to my disappointment would tell me,
“No, Those are starlings”.
It was quite frustrating for me, and it seemed like I
was forever failing in my quest to see find the coveted Martins.

Purple Martins in Crystal Springs, Saskatchewan
After we moved west, I guess we were living in an area
where there were no martins, or at least they tended not to congregate in
any numbers. It was only this last summer on a trip to Saskatchewan for a
family reunion that I finally got to see martins. It happened the morning
we drove out to meet our Uncle Roy in Crystal Springs. I had not been to
Crystal Springs since our last visit with my family to see my grandmother
Osolinski on the farm near Crystal Springs. At that time, there was just
Polly and sons Roy and Morris on the farm.
I seem to recall that Gene Moncla and John Schmidt went
someplace near Sherman Terrace where they would see swarms of purple
martins in the evening.
I think that they may have gone to watch baseball games
at Burr Jones Field, located in or near Tenney
Park. Burr Jones Field has for some
years been a roosting site for purple martins. I learned this from reading
a neighborhood newsletter on the Internet last year. I had for some years
been referring to my memories of Gene Moncla and John Schmidt watching
purple martins in Madison. Maybe this happened at this roosting spot, that
is only a few blocks from the apartment.