Air Travel …Then and Now !!!

Air travel: then and now

Luxury travel on board a BOAC De Havilland DH106 Comet 4 jetliner. It was with the Comet 4 that on 4 October 1958 BOAC operated the first ever crossings by a jet aircraft of the North Atlantic (between London and New York) carrying fare-paying passengers.

 

Air travel: then and now

British Airways Club World (Business Class).

 

Air travel: then and now

Pioneering early days at Heathrow; military tents were pressed into service during the summer of 1946 to provide basic facilities for passengers using the newly-opened airport. The amenities offered included a cable office and, of course, a W H Smith bookshop.

 

Air travel: then and now

The British Airways Concorde Lounge at Heathrow Terminal 5.

 

Air travel: then and now

The cabin of an Imperial Airways Armstrong Whitworth Argosy aircraft. Imperial Airways introduced in 1927 its ëSilver Wingí luxury service between London (Croydon) and Paris (Le Bourget) offering enhanced in-flight catering and a steward, perhaps the first branded air service in the world.

 Air travel: then and now

Senior Cabin Crew Member, Derek Tennant onboard a British Airways Airbus A320 at Heathrow.

 

Air travel: then and now

A Bristol Britannia of BOAC at London Airport North, adjacent to the A4 Bath Road. BOAC ís services moved progressively to Terminal 3 after it opened in 1961.

 

Air travel: then and now

A British Airways Airbus A319 getting ready for departure at Heathrow Termnial 5.

 

Air travel: then and now

The spacious beautifully appointed main cabin of a BOAC Boeing Stratocruiser allowed passengers to relax in sumptuous comfort. The Boeing Stratocruiser entered service with the airline in 1949.

 

Air travel: then and now

British Airways Club World (Business Class)

 

source:::: The Telegraph UK…. Pictures From British Airways

Natarajan

 

Idea of Chennai Trio May Pave the Way For a Breakthrough in Aircraft Noise Reduction !!!

 

CHENNAI: An idea floated by three Chennai students could give birth to the world’s quietest airline in the near future.

Charles Champion, the top engineering man in the world’s leading aircraft manufacturing company Airbus has said that an ambitious plan to create the aircraft of the future with zero propulsion noise by three aerospace engineering students from Chennai “makes sense” and is being looked at by the company “as a key idea to develop”.

The team from SRM University Chennai consisting of Balakrishnan Solaraju Murali, Michael Thomas and Anita Mohil, is among the only five teams that has made it to the final of the “Fly Your Ideas” competition that saw 6,000 students in 618 teams from 82 countries vie for the 30,000 euro top prize.

The Indian team’s top line idea is called “Engine air cooling system for noise reduction”.

The trio have found a way to reduce propulsion noise by modifying the shape of the jet exhaust using intelligent materials (shape memory alloys).

These alloys are powered by harvested electricity generated by advanced thermoelectric materials using engine heat source.

Speaking to TOI from France, Champion who is the executive vice president (engineering) at Airbus said “noise of an airline is a real bother. Historically there has been a 75% noise reduction of airlines in the last 50 years. It has become a serious issue. Noise of aeroplanes now decide whether airlines can fly to European or British airports or not”.

“The idea by the Chennai students to use the heat from the engine of the airline as a source of energy that will generate electricity that will help change the shape of the exhaust thereby reducing noise dramatically is a brilliant idea. But it will now go through several rounds till it reaches the technology readiness level 6. This is when the company will decide to develop the idea as a product. It will take another 4 years before the concept can be implemented,” Champion said.

All airlines are now having to prove minimum environmental impact to be able to land at airports in developed countries.

“External noise is a major component of aircraft design now. Around 20 years ago, we launched the A 737 which was the quietest of its time. Now after we launched A 380 recently, A 737 sounds noisy. Lowering noise will also lower fuel consumption. We are now working on the next generation of aircraft A 320 which is quieter than A 380 with 15% lesser fuel consumption,” Champion said.

According to Champion, India is a great asset for engineering. “This competition is to get new ideas and trends from brilliant young engineers. The Indian team has a high chance to win,” Champion added.

The competition has been floated by Airbus.

The other teams to make it to the final are from Australia, Brazil, Italy and Malaysia.

Ideas floated in the competition included planes powered by body heat, luggage floating on a bed of air or even an aircraft running on liquid methane.

The final hurdle will see students present their ideas to a jury of Airbus and industry experts at Airbus’ headquarters in Toulouse on 12th June 2013. The winning team will receive the 30,000 euro prize with the runners up bagging 15,000 euros.

The winners will be announced at an exclusive ceremony at UNESCO’s headquarters in Paris on 14th June 2013.

Aerospace engineers from across the world had to create the aircraft of the future covering one of six themes identified by Airbus as key 21st century challenges for a greener aviation industry.

These included addressing energy, efficiency, affordable and traffic growth, passenger experience and community friendliness.

source:::::Times of India ,Chennai
Natarajan

World”s First Practical Flying Car !!!!

The idea of a flying car has fascinated dreamers and aviation geeks alike since humans first got off the ground with powered flight.The concept has obvious advantages: the “go anywhere, anytime” freedom of an automobile without any of the traffic congestion that terrestrial drivers face on a daily basis.

Featured in movies like Back to the Future and Blade Runner, this mode of transportation has been restricted to the realm of science-fiction due to the complexity of the drivetrain required and the training that would be needed to operate such a vehicle.

Now, a company called Terrafugia has put forward their vision for a practical flying car. Using electric-gasoline hybrid technology from the cutting edge of the automobile industry and autopilot technology adopted from the aviation industry, the company thinks they have what’s needed to bring a flying car to the mass market.

The concept started as the Terrafugia Transition, a plane that can be driven on the road

The concept started as the Terrafugia Transition, a plane that can be driven on the road

Unfortunately, the Transition had to take off and land from an airport, so Terrafugia began working on a second generation concept

 Unfortunately, the Transition had to take off and land from an airport, so Terrafugia began working on a second generation concept
Which came to be known as the Terrafugia TF-X, an electric-hybrid flying car with a range of 500 milesWhich came to be known as the Terrafugia TF-X, an electric-hybrid flying car with a range of 500 miles

It’ll have room to fit four comfortably

It'll have room to fit four comfortably

It’ll fit in a standard single-car garage.

It'll fit in a standard single-car garage

On the ground it relies on an electric drivetrain, so you won’t always be filling it up with gasoline

On the ground it relies on an electric drivetrain, so you won't always be filling it up with gas

You can also charge the batteries by plugging it in at home

You can also charge the batteries by plugging it in at home

Once you’re in the air, the gasoline engine charges the batteries for driving

Once you're in the air, the gasoline engine charges the batteries for driving

If you run low on fuel in the middle of a flight, it’ll automatically find a safe spot to land. The driver has final say on whether a spot is safe for landing.

If you run low on fuel in the middle of a flight, it'll automatically find a safe spot to land. The driver has final say on whether a spot is safe for landing.

A  video clip on Fly CAR

SOURCE::::businessinsider.com

Natarajan

Polish Pilot Lands Plane without Wheels !!!!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=sbV58eY0MyM

 

 

Faced with a flight emergency, a Polish pilot pulled off a remarkable feat of airmanship that saved hundreds of lives and made it’s way into aviation history. Actual video shot inside the cabin shows the passengers in the moments before the crash landing.

 

source:::youtube.com

Natarajan

Mid Air Turbulance… “Fasten Seat Belt” Sign May Not be Switched off Henceforth …

Passengers were left surrounded by this chaotic mess after the plane hit turbulence

This is what happens when you hit an extreme bout of turbulence just after breakfast has been served.

Passengers on a recent Singapore Airlines flight were left surrounded by the chaotic mess after their flight hit the rough patch and suddenly lost altitude.

A total of 11 passengers and one crew member were injured in the incident on flight SQ308 from Singapore to London.
Mr Cross said anything that wasn't tied down hit the ceiling when the plane lost altitude

Coffee can be seen on the ceiling of the Singapore to Heathrow flight following the turbulence

Coffee can be seen on the ceiling of the Singapore to Heathrow flight following the turbulence


Mr Cross said the cabin crew and passengers were 'amazing' in the aftermath, as 'a calm and efficient clean-up' was underway

cabin crew and passengers were ‘amazing’ in the aftermath, as ‘a calm and efficient clean-up’ was underway


One passenger on the flight, who saw his coffee end up on the ceiling, managed to take these pictures which he posted to Instagram.

Passengers Alan Cross told ABC News those on the flight had been warned to expect turbulence and that the breakfast service would be temporarily suspended.

A short while after the seat belt sign came on, the captain issued an order for all flight attendants to immediately take their seats.

Mr Cross said the subsequent turbulence felt ‘like being in an elevator with a cut cable or free-falling from some amusement park ride.’

He said everything that was not tied down, including people, hit the ceiling.

The airline has told Australia News: ‘Eleven passengers and one crew member sustained minor injuries when the aircraft experienced a sudden loss of altitude and were attended to by medical personnel on arrival at Heathrow Airport. Seat-belt signs were on at the time and meal services had already been suspended.

Mr Cross said: ‘The cabin crew was amazing in the aftermath, as were fellow passengers who helped everyone around them then in a calm and efficient clean-up.’

He said crew checked for injuries before cleaning up the mess and gave passengers boxes of chocolates as they departed at Heathrow, where they were met by paramedics.

Earlier this year scientists suggested climate change could result in flights from London to New York getting much bumpier in the future.

Researchers from East Anglia and Reading universities analysed supercomputer simulations of the atmospheric jet stream over the North Atlantic and claimed climate change will increase air turbulence.

They found the chances of hitting significant turbulence will rise by 40 to 170 per cent by 2050, with the likeliest outcome being a doubling of the airspace containing significant turbulence at any time.

Dr Paul Williams from the University of Reading and the University of East Anglia’s Dr Manoj Joshi said the average strength of turbulence will also increase, by between 10 and 40 per cent.

Dr Williams said: ‘Most air passengers will have experienced the uncomfortable feeling of mid-flight air turbulence. Our research suggests that we’ll be seeing the “fasten seatbelts” sign turned on more often in the decades ahead.’

source:::::mailonline.com

Natarajan

Stunning Images of The Week !!!

Storm surge  A man run away as waves crash over a barrier in Yantai, Shandong Province, China. Strong storms have battered the country’s coast.

 

Battling the blazeA plane drops fire-dousing chemicals near Santa Barbara, California, during attempts to quell a 170-acre grass fire. Some 2,000 people were evacuated.

 

Ferry cross the murkyA boat navigates past the Sydney Harbour bridge in Australia amidst thick fog. Flights and ferry services were delayed as a blanket of fog covered the city.

 

Animatronic apeDesigner Sonny Tilders unveils a six-metre tall, 1.1-tonne gorilla created for the world premiere of the King Kong musical in Melbourne, Australia.

 

Rising rocketA Soyuz TMA-09M spacecraft is lifted to its launch pad at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Three astronauts blasted into space on 29 May.

 

Breaking the cageTwo bears seen through the bars of a private zoo near a restaurant in Pristina, Kosovo. A campaign has been launched to free bears kept in such conditions.

 

From sea to airA Japanese US-2 seaplane takes off. Japan has just signed a contract to provide the aircraft to India – the first time Tokyo has exported arms since 1967. (

 

source::::bbc.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

The “Plane ” Truth About Flying ….A Plain Speak !!!!

 

“PLEASE ensure your seatbelt is securely fastened, your seat is fully upright and all electronic devices are switched off.”

Have you ever wondered why airlines tell you to do these things?

There’s no doubt some aspects of flying are shrouded in mystery, but never fear, we’ve got the answers to 10 things you’ve just got to know about air travel.

1. Does the brace position really work?
There are numerous – and some quite ridiculous – theories about why airlines push the brace position, including that it’s only useful for preserving teeth and thus allowing for easier identification.

The  Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) says more than 70 per cent of airline accidents are survivable. But how many lives are saved by using the brace position? Well CASA cited an incident where a plane carrying 16 passengers crashed. While the rest slept or were reading, one passenger woke up and saw the plane was about to hit trees so he adopted the brace position. He was the only survivor. The absence of fatalities when US Airways Flight 1549 landed in the Hudson River has also been attributed to the position.

The deliberate crash landing of a Boeing 727 into the Mexican desert last year by team of scientists, pilots and safety experts for the documentary The Plane Crash provided more answers. There were three dummies on board: one was seated in the classic brace position with seatbelt fastened, the second had just the seatbelt fastened, and a third had neither. Experts found the first dummy would have survived, the second would have suffered severe head injuries and the third would have died.

Here’s a tip: If you need to brace for impact put your hands on your head, your weaker one over the other stronger one. That way, if something falls on you the stronger hand is likely to be OK as it’s been protected – and you’ll need it to unbuckle your seat belt when the time comes.

2. Is it true that diet cola is harder to pour in the skies?
It’s true, the fizz and the high altitude make diet cola the most difficult drink to pour. Flight attendant and author Heather Poole says: “Of all the drinks we serve, Diet Coke takes the most time to pour – the fizz takes forever to settle at 35,000 feet. In the time it takes me to pour a single cup of Diet Coke, I can serve three passengers a different beverage.”

3. Why do window shutters have to be raised and seats upright upon take-off and landing?
Window shutters are required to be open and seats in the upright position so that cabin crew and passengers can easily identify what is happening outside the plane in the event of an issue during take-off and landing e.g. fire, according to a major Australia airline.

Having the shutters up also allows rescuers to see inside the cabin more easily and locate trapped passengers in the event of an emergency, and lets light in.

And you should obey the crew when they tell you to put your seat upright for take-off and landing – it’s for your own safety. Brian Manning, a flight attendant for US Mesa Airlines explains: “When the seat is up, it is locked. When the seat is back, it’s not locked. In the event of an emergency, an unlocked seat has more force during impact, and the thrusting forward of that seat can cause passenger injury.”

Having seats upright also provides more room to escape and is beneficial for fellow passengers – those seated behind reclined or unlocked seats may not be able to brace themselves properly on impact.

4. Is it true that you’re more likely to survive a plane crash if you’re sitting towards the back?
There’s a one in 90 million chance of being killed in a plane crash, according to the US National Transportation Safety Bureau.

And it’s good news for the masses: It’s safer to sit towards the back of the plane than the front, according to The Plane Crash documentary. When they crashed the plane they found anyone sitting in seat 7A would have been killed – that chair was catapulted 152m from the wreckage in the program.

Anne Evans, a former investigator at the UK’s Air Accidents Investigation Branch, inspected the 727’s black-box data recorder after the crash and said: “It’s safer to sit at the back of the aircraft where the flight recorder is. The front is more vulnerable because that often sees higher impact forces.”

 

 Plane generic

5. Why do they dim the lights during some landings?
Lights are dimmed upon landing so that passengers eyes can adjust to the natural light and in the event of an incident makes identifying sparks or flames easy, according to a major Australian airline.

6. Is alcohol more potent at higher altitudes?
Not true, according to studies. Dr. Bhushan Kapur from the University of Toronto said passengers’ blood alcohol level doesn’t increase in the air. However, people do tend to drink more in a shorter time frame in the skies, which can leave them more impaired. So where does the misconception come from? The onboard effects of hypoxia – less oxygenated conditions due to the low-pressure environment and high altitude – can cause passengers to experience symptoms similar to intoxication.

7. Can plane air make you sick?
Cabin air is a mix of fresh and recirculated air. Air is sucked in through the jet engines, then into a bleed pipe that enters the cabin unfiltered. A study by CASA that ended last year didn’t rule out the possibility that toxicity could occur on flights. According to the study, oils, fluids, fumes and gases could mix with the heated air intended for the air conditioning system due to poor maintenance practices, worn engine oil seals or exhaust fumes from aircraft taxiing or engine start.

While rare, it does happen. In February a British Airways flight made an emergency landing after a pilot because nauseous and incapacitated after smelling toxic oil fumes. The captain and first officer were able to land the plane with the help of oxygen masks. Earlier this year questions were asked over the deaths of two British Airways pilots who died within four days of each other after complaining of being exposed to toxic oil fumes.

Following the incidents the UK Civil Aviation Authority records revealed pilots were putting on oxygen masks at least five times a week to combat suspected “fume events”.

There’s a name for such cases: Aerotoxic syndrome.

8. How much radiation are passengers exposed to during a flight?
People travelling in aircraft may be exposed to more ionising radiation than they would be exposed to on the ground. That’s because when you’re flying between 7000 and 12,000 metres (the typical cruising altitude of a commercial aircraft), the Earth’s atmosphere provides less protection from cosmic radiation.

To put this into perspective, during a seven-hour flight from New York to London travellers receive about the same dose of radiation as a chest X-ray; and from New York to Tokyo, two chest X-rays, according to the US Federal Aviation Administration.

 

 

9. What are the best ways to beat jetlag?
What you need to do is reset your internal clock. These tips can help:
1. Try to shift your sleep pattern – go to bed one hour earlier or later depending on which direction you are flying.
2. If you’re going on a really long flight (for instance, from Australia to Europe) take melatonin pills for 2-3 days before the trip.
3. Drink ginger tea.
4. When on the plane go to sleep as soon as possible, don’t take sleeping pills on board and avoid alcohol and coffee.
5. When you arrive stay up until it’s bedtime wherever you are, walk around in the sun and if you must nap keep it under an hour. If you flew eastward, take a low dose of melatonin for three nights before bed. If you flew westward, and find yourself waking up early the first morning there, take a low dose of melatonin. More advice on jetlag here.

10. Can your mobile phone cause a plane crash?
The jury’s still out on this issue, but airlines are erring on the side of caution. Current regulations give crew the power to ban the use of any device that could threaten the safety of an aircraft. Experts say that electromagnetic waves emitted by mobiles can interfere with a plane’s electronics and cause a crash, concerns that were outlined in an investigation by the New York Times.

This guide to evacuations from CASA is worth a look.

source::::news.com.au

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/the-plane-truth-about-flying-revealed/story-e6frfq80-1226649790296#ixzz2UCPHbNG8

Dhaka ,Instead of Dakar Senegal !!!…”Wrong Number “!!!!

Turkish Airlines passengers ended up on the wrong continent.
THIS is an airline booking blunder of epic proportions.
Passengers Sandy Valdivieso and her husband Triet Vo were looking forward to a holiday in Africa.
They had booked a Turkish Airlines flight from Los Angeles to Dakar, Senegal, but an airline mix-up sent them 11,000 kilometres away to another continent, landing in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
It turns out an airline employee had accidentally entered the wrong three-letter airport code into the flight booking system. The code for Dakar is DKR, while Dhaka is DAC.
So how did they not notice they were on the wrong flight?
“I guess we were just going by the flight number on our tickets, and that DAC was printed on them,” Valdivieso told the Los Angeles Times. “You just assume that everything is correct.”
“When the flight attendant said we were heading to Dhaka, we believed that this was how you pronounced ‘Dakar’ with a Turkish accent.”
The first leg of their flight to Istanbul went smoothly, but it was the second leg of the trip that sent them off in the wrong direction.
Several hours into the trip they woke up from a long sleep and noticed the inflight map showed the plane over the Middle East. They then realised the plane was full of passengers who looked Asian, not African.
“That’s when we knew a serious mistake had been made.”
Once on the ground, they claim it took several hours for the airline to confirm the mistake after tracking down the recording of the booking, proving that Valdivieso had requested a trip to Senegal.
They were flown back to Istanbul 12 hours later, free of charge.
Turkish Airlines spokesperson Fatma Yuceler has apologised for the incident and said the airline will offer the passengers two free economy class tickets to any destination it flies to.
“We are very, very sorry that this happened,” she told the Los Angeles Times.

Turkish Airlines

source:::news.com.au

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/airline-mix-up-sends-couple-to-wrong-continent/story-e6frfq7r-1226646569309#ixzz2TqsRO0YN

ஆபத்பாந்தவான் நம் மகாபெரியவர் !!!!

அவதார புருஷர்- பெரியவா

காஞ்சியில் ஒரு கோவிலில் பெரியவா எல்லாருக்கும் தர்சனம் குடுத்துக் கொண்டிருந்தார். அப்போது உணர்ச்சிப் பெருக்கை உடலால் சமாளிக்க முடியாமல் ஒரு தம்பதி தங்கள் பெண் குழந்தையுடன் வந்து பெரியவாளை நமஸ்கரித்தனர்.

”ஆந்த்ரப்ரபா” பத்திரிகையின் ஆசிரியரும், காந்திஜியின் நெருக்கமான தோழருமான நீலம் ராஜு வேங்கடஸேஷைய்யாவின; புதல்விதான் அந்த அம்மா. பெரியவா அவர்களுடைய க்ஷேம லாபங்களை விஜாரித்தார். அவர்கள் கண்களில் கண்ணீர் வழிந்தோட கூறியதை கேட்டு, சுற்றி நின்று கொண்டிருந்த அத்தனை பேருக்கும் மயிர்க்கூச்சல் எடுத்தது..
“இன்னிக்கு பெரியவாளோட க்ருபையாலதான் இங்க வந்திருக்கோம்…நாஙக லண்டன்ல இருக்கோம். கொஞ்ச நாளைக்கு முன்னால [ஏதோ ஒரு தேசத்தின் பெயரைக் கூறி] அந்த country க்கு flight ல போய்ண்டிருந்தோம். திடீர்னு இஞ்சின்ல ஏதோ பெரிய கோளாறு. அதுனால safe landing கூட முடியாது..ங்கற மாதிரி பைலட் எல்லாருக்கும் ரெட் சிக்னல் குடுத்தார். விமானத்துக்குள்ள இருந்த அத்தனை பேரோட மனநிலையும் சொல்லக் கூட முடியாது!

ஆனா, உயிரே போகப்போறது..ங்கற நிலைமைல எங்களால பெரியவாளைத் தவிர வேற எதையுமே நினைக்கத் தோணலை! பெரியவாளோட சரணங்களை மானசீகமா கெட்டியா பிடிச்சிண்டோம்! எங்களோட பயம் பயமாத் தெரியலை! எங்களோட டிராவல் பண்ணிக் கொண்டிருந்த அத்தனை வெளிநாட்டுக்காராளயும் தைரியமா இருக்கச் சொல்லி, “Sage of Kanchi ” ன்னு பெரியவாளை நாங்க தெய்வமாவே வர்ணிச்சு, ஆபத்பாந்தவர் அவரை வேண்டிண்டா, எந்த பெரிய விபத்தும் ஓடிப் போய்டும்ன்னு சொன்னதும், ப்ராணாபத்து வந்தா, பொழைக்கறதுக்கு எதைத்தான் பிடிச்சுக்க மாட்டா? அன்னிக்கி அந்த முழு விமானமும் பெரியவாளை த்யானிக்கற, பெரியவாளோட திருவடில தஞ்சமடையற த்யானகூடமாயிடுத்த

கொஞ்ச நேரத்துல பைலட்டுகளுக்கு cooperate பண்ணாத முக்யமான இஞ்சின்கள், கருவிகள் எல்லாமே ஏதோ அதிசயமா “miracle “ன்னு அத்தனை பேரும் [பைலட்டுகள் உட்பட] ஆச்சர்யப்படும்படி ரொம்ப லகுவா வேலை செய்ய ஆரம்பிச்சுடுத்து! சாவோட விளிம்புலேர்ந்து எங்க எல்லாரையும் பெரியவா காப்பாத்திட்டா! விமானம் கீழ இறங்கினதும், பைலட்டுலேர்ந்து அத்தனை பேரும் எங்களை சூழ்ந்துண்டு, Kanchi Sage க்கு லெட்டர் எழுதினாலோ, அவரை பார்த்தாலோ, எங்க எல்லாரோட இதயபூர்வமான நன்றியையும், நமஸ்காரத்தையும் கட்டாயம் அவருக்கு தெரிவிக்கணும்ன்னு ரொம்ப கேட்டுண்டா….எங்களு கோ ஒடனே இந்தியாவுக்கு வந்து பெரியவாளை தர்சனம் பண்ணி, அவருக்கு பாதபூஜை பண்ணனும்னு ரொம்ப தவியா தவிச்சு, நேரே இங்க வந்துட்டோம்…” என்று விம்மல்களுக்கிடைய சொல்லி முடித்தனர்.

ஆனால் பெரியவாளோ எப்போதும்போல் தனக்கும் இதற்கும் சம்பந்தமே இல்லாத மாதிரி, தனக்கு அவர்கள் சொல்லித்தான் எதுவுமே தெரிந்தா மாதிரி மலர்ந்து சிரித்துக் கொண்டே கேட்டுக் கொண்டிருந்தார். பாரிஷதரிடம் பாதுகைகளை கொண்டு வரச் சொல்லிவிட்டு, அவர்களுடைய சின்னப் பெண் குழந்தையை அருகில் அழைத்து, பெற்றோர் கொண்டுவந்திருந்த ஸ்வர்ணபுஷ்பங்கள், வாஸனை புஷ்பங்கள் எல்லாவற்றையும் அதன் குட்டி பூ போன்ற கைகளால் அள்ளி அள்ளி போடச் சொன்னார். அதுவும் அழகாக அர்ச்சனையாகவே பாதுகைக்கு புஷ்பங்களைப் போட்டது.

பெரியவா அந்த தம்பதியிடம் “நீங்க ரெண்டு பேரும் சேந்துதான் இந்தக் கொழந்தை. இது பண்ற பூஜை, நீங்களே பண்ணறதுதான்! அதோட ஒங்க கையால பண்றதை விட, இது குட்டிக் கையால பண்ணறச்சே நெறைய அர்ச்சனை, நெறைய நாழி நடக்கும்!” என்று தெலுங்கில் கூறினார். அன்று அங்கு எல்லோருமே அந்த ஆனந்தத்தை அனுபவித்தனர்.

அவதார புருஷர்களிடம் உண்மையான பக்தி கொண்டவர்கள், எங்கிருந்தாலும் எந்த ஆபத்திலிருந்தும் நிச்சயம் காப்பாற்றப் படுவார்கள்.

SRI KANCHI MAHA PERIVA THIRUVADIGAL CHARANAM

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/4348/avathara-purushar-kanchi-maha-periva/#ixzz2TkXfRKHM

Natarajan