An often used line for a good adventure story goes…”It was a
dark and stormy night!” And so does this story about such a night.
Turning back the pages of time our story begins in the late
afternoon hours when our entire helicopter company was called out to support an
emergency situation, the details of which have escaped me. The flight, some
twenty plus helicopters, “slicks” (transports) and their “guns” (armed support)
escort launched into gathering storm clouds and headed north.
Fortunately CWO Driggers, our company training pilot, diligently worked on preparing his young pilots, many of us in our late teens or early twenties, for “inadvertent flight into IMC” (Instrument Meteorological Conditions). This training was conducted “under the hood” or a shield fitted over our helmets that only allowed a view of our “instruments”.
Ok now the stage has been set. On this evening, as we
approached the line of thunderstorms we blindly followed our leader into the
storm. Almost instantly the “dark and stormy night” wrapped around us and
hurled us into its churning cauldron of heavy rain, buffeting winds and intense
lightening. What we thought we were doing has puzzled me for all these years.
However, we took the training Mr. Driggers had given us a plowed ahead.
The radio was a cacophony of urgent messages from the other
helicopter as they realized their predicament and elected to divert to a number
of different alternates. Darkness rapidly enveloped the entire flight. Our door
gunner and crew chief gunner silently closed the doors and prepared for the
worst and were surely praying the two young pilots up front knew what they were
doing.
How much time went by I have no idea…we just dialed up the
nearest Non-Directional Beacon (NDB) radio beacon and plunged onward until we passed
over the beacon then made successive turns back to the beacon and started descending
until we broke out over the airfield. Did we call for permission? I don’t
remember…I do remember the tower telling us to stay where we had landed until
the monsoonal rains let up enough for further instructions…this we did!
Thanks to our training from Mr. Driggers, our own practice
when returning from flights and confidence in each other we survived. Others
were not so fortunate on that “dark and stormy night”.
2 comments:
Hello My name is Tammy Campbell and I have recently found out that my Uncle Donald Lee Baker was a part of this "Dark Stormy Night" unfortunately he did not make it back. Thank you for your service to our country!!
I just found out that my uncle Donald Lee Baker was a part of this "Dark Stormy Night" Thank you and all the others for your service to our country
Post a Comment