A hurricane scientist logged a final flight as NOAA released his ashes
into Milton’s eye
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[October 11, 2024]
By JOHN RABY
As an award-winning scientist, Peter Dodge had made hundreds of flights
into the eyes of hurricanes — almost 400. On Tuesday, a crew on a
reconnaissance flight into Hurricane Milton helped him make one more,
dropping his ashes into the storm as a lasting tribute to the longtime
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration radar specialist and
researcher.
“It’s very touching,” Dodge's sister, Shelley Dodge, said in an
interview Thursday with The Associated Press. “We knew it was a goal of
NOAA to make it happen.”
The ashes were released into the eye of the hurricane Tuesday night,
less than 24 hours before Milton made landfall in Siesta Key near
Sarasota, Florida. An in-flight observations log, which charts
information such as position and wind speed, ended with a reference to
Dodge’s 387th — and final — flight.
“He’s loved that aspect of his job,” Shelley Dodge said. “It’s
bittersweet. On one hand, a hurricane’s coming and you don’t want that
for people. But on the other hand, I really wanted this to happen.”
Dodge died in March 2023 at age 72 of complications from a fall and a
stroke, his sister said.
The Miami resident spent 44 years in federal service. Among his awards
were several for technology used to study Hurricane Katrina’ s
destructive winds in 2005.
He also was part of the crew aboard a reconnaissance flight into
Hurricane Hugo in 1989 that experienced severe turbulence and saw one of
its four engines catch fire.
“They almost didn’t get out of the eye,” Shelley Dodge said.
Items inside the plane were torn loose and tossed about the cabin. After
dumping excess fuel and some heavy instruments to enable the flight to
climb further, an inspection found no major damage to the plane and it
continued on. The plane eventually exited the storm with no injuries to
crew members, according to NOAA.
A degenerative eye disorder eventually prevented Dodge from going on
further reconnaissance flights.
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This GOES-16 GeoColor satellite image taken at 12:15 p.m. EDT and
provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
shows Hurricane Milton in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast off
Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024. (NOAA via AP)
Shelley Dodge said NOAA had kept her informed on when her brother's
final mission would occur and she relayed the information to
relatives.
“There were various times where they thought all the pieces were
going to fall in place but it had to be the right combination, the
research flight. All of that had to come together,” she said. “It
finally did on the 8th. I didn’t know for sure until they sent me
the official printout that showed exactly where it happened in the
eye.”
Dodge had advanced expertise in radar technology with a keen
interest in tropical cyclones, according to a March 2023 newsletter
by NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory
announcing his death.
He collaborated with the National Hurricane Center and Aircraft
Operations Center on airborne and land-based radar research. During
hurricane aircraft missions, he served as the onboard radar
scientist and conducted radar analyses. Later, he became an expert
in radar data processing, the newsletter said.
Dodge’s ashes were contained in a package. Among the symbols draped
on it was the flag of Nepal, where he spent time as a Peace Corps
volunteer teaching math and science to high school students before
becoming a meteorologist.
An avid gardener, Dodge also had a fondness for bamboo and
participated in the Japanese martial art Aikido, attending a session
the weekend before he died.
“He just had an intellectual curiosity that was undaunted, even
after he lost his sight,” Shelley Dodge said.
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