Just heard a familiar noise pass right over my house, and did a bit of research to see if it confirmed what I think is about to happen soon. I was right; one final piggyback ride for our space shuttle. This time, the Endeavor will be making it's last showings (and is probably the final one to make the rounds), and a few places will be lucky enough to get a hell of a view as it flies by at low altitude.
More info here:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48943784/ns/technology_and_science-space/t/shuttle-endeavour-get-one-last-piggyback-ride-across-us/EDIT:
If you're in the areas, and it makes it's low-pass; caution, it gets loud. I've had it buzz past my house one time returning the Atlantis to KSC (and several other times, in the middle of the night; but it was too dark, and I wasn't even aware of the return trips either, so I didn't know what was going on; but yeah, it rattled the windows). It was epic. The previous piggy-back delivery out of KSC was a disappointment, since it didn't follow a similar route, but instead was pretty high and distant (although it was low enough to be spotted in the sky), over the main land, and not the beach; like the one I saw pass by. However, seeing it go by with a couple military jets escorting it was pretty cool, nonetheless.
EDIT EDIT:
Now that I come and think of it, I guess it was flying pretty low, for what it was worth, and I had a special encounter/experience. I mean, the flyby over the main land was probably at around 1500 altitude, but the pass over the beach was more along the lines of 150-500 altitude (It was low enough to buzz past the local condos, and you could see the windows of the jet and shuttle in full-detail at that height). Nevermind. Guess I shouldn't complain about seeing it so high up as it flew by the last time, since the previous time, I think the pilots had to ask special permission from the FAA to do that (buzzing the whole Space Coast at those altitudes) back then.