Not kidding about that. Under the glass? An old ICBM. Rattlesnakes? Not my first concern! (OK, so the missile was never fueled and can never be launched. Still. The irony.)
Today happens to be Pearl Harbor Day, but we visited a monument to a different war.The missile silo, 8 stories deep, is under the tan metal covering on the left. Fueling truck on the right, communications and surveillance antennae surrounding.
Inside the control room, a few items we now consider relics helped keep the world from nuclear disaster: grease pencils, rotary phones, analog clocks, slide rules, printed manuals, and ASCII tape. Quaint.The launch clock: kept on Zulu time, wound weekly. By hand. The Cold War world was also an analog world.Nope. No worries if you press the wrong button. Launching a missile involved turning keys. Again, quaint.I peered behind a partition and found yet another relic!I really did! Damn good hydraulics on that thing. The tour guide explained the how and why, but all I could think was “lots of WD-40, man.”This is the 3-ton blast door, and I moved it!The passageway from control room to siloTitan II: 10 feet in diameter, 103 feet long, 9 megatons of nuclear powerModel of the missile silo. Our tour was contained to the 3rd level down.The fear was real…… but now we laugh. A little.
The museum occupies the only remaining silo of the original 54 (18 sites each in AZ, AR, and KS).It’s also a bit of an analog world at Aunt Jo & Uncle Jim’s place. This is how they find a restaurant for lunch. Their methodology is sound, and lunch was great!After lunch: Mission San Xavier, with we(e) two in frontInside the mission, the choir was rehearsing for a Christmas concert.From atop Sentinel Peak, we say “Farewell, Tucson!”And thanks for being such a great tour guide, Mark!