Saber Article Index
2013 Nov-Dec
MEDEVAC 15th Med\15th FSB
Mike Bodnar
307B N Main Copperas Cove, TX 76522
1704 254-542-1961
E-mail:
mbodnar27@juno.com
Celine James
celine.james87@gmail.com
e-mailed: "I recently published an in-depth college financial aid guide for
individuals in the military, and I was hoping to share it with your
readership. You can check it out here:
http://www.onlinecolleges.net/for-students/college-guide-for-veterans ."
1970 MEDEVAC PSG Don Barton mudmedic70@hotmail.com sent over a
pertinent essay from one of his grunt friends (A Co 1/5th):
"The
Sound that Binds-Unique to all that served in Vietnam is the UH-1H
helicopter. It was both devil and angel and it served as both extremely
well. Whether a LRRP, US or RVN soldier or civilian, whether, NVA, VC,
Allied or civilian, it provided a sound and sense that lives with us all
today. It is the one sound that immediately clears the clouds of time and
freshens the forgotten images within our mind. It will be the sound track of
our last moments on earth. It was a simple machine - a single engine, a
single blade and four man crew - yet like the Model T, it transformed us all
and performed tasks the engineers and designers never imagined. For
soldiers, it was the worst and best of friends but it was the one binding
material in a tapestry of a war of many pieces.
"The smell was always
hot, filled with diesel fumes, sharp drafts accentuated by gritty sand,
laterite and anxious vibrations. It always held the spell of the unknown and
the anxiety of learning what was next and what might be. It was an
unavoidable magnet for the heavily laden soldier who donkey-trotted to its
squat shaking shape through the haze and blast of dirt, stepped on the OD
skid, turned and dropped his ruck on the cool aluminum deck. Reaching inside
with his rifle or machine gun, a soldier would grasp a floor ring with a
finger as an extra precaution of physics for those moments when the now
airborne bird would break into a sharp turn revealing all ground or all sky
to the helpless riders all very mindful of the impeding weight on their
backs. The relentless weight of the ruck combined with the stress of varying
motion caused fingers and floor rings to bind almost as one. Constant was
the vibration, smell of hydraulic fluid, flashes of visionary images and the
occasional burst of a ground-fed odor-rotting fish, dank swampy heat,
cordite or simply the continuous sinuous currents of Vietnam’s weather -
cold and driven mist in the Northern monsoon or the wall of heated humidity
in the southern dry season. Blotting it out and shading the effect was the
constant sound of the single rotating blade as it ate a piece of the air,
struggling to overcome the momentary physics of the weather.
"To
divert anxiety, a soldier/piece of freight, might reflect on his home away
from home. The door gunners were usually calm which was emotionally helpful.
Each gun had a C ration fruit can at the ammo box clip entrance to the feed
mechanism of the machine gun. The gun had a large circular aiming sight
unlike the ground pounder version. That had the advantage of being able to
fix on targets from the air considerably further than normal ground
acquisition. Pears, Apricots, Apple Sauce or Fruit Cocktail, it all worked.
Fruit cans had just the right width to smoothly feed the belt into the gun
which was always a good thing. Some gunners carried a large oil can much
like old locomotive engineers to squeeze on the barrel to keep it cool.
Usually this was accompanied by a large OD towel or a khaki wound pack
bandage to allow a rubdown without a burned hand. Under the gunners seat was
usually a small dairy-box filled with extra ammo boxes, smoke grenades,
water, flare pistol, C rats and a couple of well-worn paperbacks. The gun
itself might be attached to the roof of the helicopter with a bungi cord and
harness. This allowed the adventurous gunners to unattached the gun from the
pintle and fire it manually while standing on the skid with only the
thinnest of connectivity to the bird. These were people you wanted near you
- particularly on extractions.
"The pilots were more mysterious. You
only saw parts of them as they labored behind the armored seats. An arm, a
helmeted head and the occasional fingered hand as it moved across the dials
and switches on the ceiling above. The armored side panels covered their
outside legs - an advantage the passenger did not enjoy. Sometimes, a face,
shielded behind helmeted sunshades, would turn around to impart a question
with a glance or display a sense of anxiety with large white-circled eyes -
this was not a welcoming look as the sounds of external issues fought to
override the sounds of mechanics in flight. Yet, as a whole, the pilots got
you there, took you back and kept you maintained. You never remembered
names, if at all you knew them, but you always remembered the ride and the
sound.
"Behind each pilot seat usually ran a stretch of wire or silk
attaching belt. It would have arrayed a variety of handy items for immediate
use. Smoke grenades were the bulk of the attachment inventory - most colors
and a couple of white phosphorous if a dramatic marking was needed.
Sometimes, trip flares or hand grenades would be included depending on the
location and mission. Hand grenades were a rare exception as even pilots
knew they exploded - not always where intended. It was just a short arm
motion for a door gunner to pluck an inventory item off the string, pull the
pin and pitch it which was the point of the arrangement. You didn’t want to
be in a helicopter when such an act occurred as that usually meant there was
an issue. Soldiers don’t like issues that involve them. It usually means a
long day or a very short one - neither of which is a good thing.
"The
bird lifts off in a slow, struggling and shaking manner. Dust clouds obscure
any view a soldier may have. Quickly, with a few subtle swings, the bird is
above the dust and a cool encompassing wind blows through. Sweat is quickly
dried, eyes clear and a thousand feet of altitude show the world below.
Colors are muted but objects clear. The rows of wooden hooches, the
airfield, local villages, an old B52 strike, the mottled trail left by a
Ranchhand spray mission and the open reflective water of a river or lake are
crisp in sight. The initial anxiety of the flight or mission recede as the
constantly moving and soothing motion picture and soundtrack unfolds. In
time, one is aware of the mass of UH-1H’s coalescing in a line in front of
and behind you. Other strings of birds may be left or right of you - all
surging toward some small speck in the front lost to your view. Each is a
mirror image of the other - two to three laden soldiers sitting on the edge
looking at you and your accompanying passengers all going to the same place
with the same sense of anxiety and uncertainty but borne on a similar steed
and sound.
"In time, one senses the birds coalescing as they approach
the objective. Perhaps a furtive glance or sweeping arc of flight reveals
the landing zone. Smoke erupts in columns - initially visible as blue grey
against the sky. The location is clearly discernible as a trembling spot
surrounded by a vast green carpet of flat jungle or a sharp point of a
jutting ridge, As the bird gets closer, a soldier can now see the small FAC
aircraft working well-below, the sudden sweeping curve of the bombing runs
and the small puffs as artillery impacts. A sense of immense loneliness can
begin to obscure one’s mind as the world’s greatest theatre raises its
curtain. Even closer now, with anxious eyes and short breath, a soldier can
make out his destination. The smoke is now the dirty grey black of munitions
with only the slightest hint of orange upon ignition. No Hollywood effect is
at work. Here, the physics of explosions are clearly evident as pressure and
mass over light.
"The pilot turns around to give a thumbs up or
simply ignores his load as he struggles to maintain position with multiple
birds dropping power through smoke swirls, uplifting newly created debris,
sparks and flaming ash. The soldiers instinctively grasp their weapons
tighter, look furtively between the upcoming ground and the pilot and
mentally strain to find some anchor point for the next few seconds of life.
If this is the first lift in, the door gunners will be firing rapidly in
sweeping motions of the gun but this will be largely unknown and unfelt to
the soldiers. They will now be focused on the quickly approaching ground and
the point where they might safely exit. Getting out is now very important.
Suddenly, the gunners may rapidly point to the ground and shout, “GO” or
there may just be the jolt of the skids hitting the ground and the soldiers
instinctively lurch out of the bird, slam into the ground and focus on the
very small part of the world they now can see. The empty birds, under full
power, squeeze massive amounts of air and debris down on the exited soldiers
blinding them to the smallest view. Very quickly, there is a sudden shroud
of silence as the birds retreat into the distance and the soldiers begin
their recovery into a cohesive organization losing that sound.
"On
various occasions and weather dependent, the birds return. Some to provide
necessary logistics, some command visits and some Medevacs. On the rarest
and best of occasions, they arrive to take you home. Always they have the
same sweet sound which resonates with every soldier who ever heard it. It is
the sound of life, hope for life and what may be. It is a sound that never
will be forgotten. It is your and our sound.
"Logistics is always a
trial. Pilots don’t like it, field soldiers need it and weather is
indiscriminate. Log flights also mean mail and a connection to home and
where real people live and live real lives. Here is an aberrant aspect of
life that only that sound can relieve. Often there is no landing zone or the
area is so hot that a pilot’s sense of purpose may become blurred. Ground
commander’s beg and plead on the radio for support that is met with
equivocations or insoluble issues. Rations are stretched from four to six
days, cigarettes become serious barter items and soldiers begin to turn
inward. In some cases, perhaps only minutes after landing, firefights break
out. The machine guns begin their carnivorous song. Rifle ammunition and
grenades are expended with gargantuan appetites. The air is filled with an
all-encompassing sound that shuts each soldier into his own small world -
shooting, loading, shooting, loading, shooting, loading until he has to
quickly reach into the depth of his ruck, past the extra rations, past the
extra rain poncho, past the spare paperback, to the eight M16 magazines
forming the bottom of the load - never thought he would need them. A
resupply is desperately needed. In some time, a sound is heard over the din
of battle. A steady whomp whomp whomp that says; The World is here. Help is
on the way. Hang in there. The soldier turns back to the business at hand
with a renewed confidence. Wind parts the canopy and things begin to crash
through the treetops. Some cases have smoke grenades attached - these are
the really important stuff - medical supplies, codes and maybe mail. The
sound drifts off in the distance and things are better for the moment. The
sound brings both a psychological and a material relief.
"Wounds are
hard to manage. The body is all soft flesh, integrated parts and an
emotional burden for those that have to watch its deterioration. If the body
is an engine, blood is the gasoline - when it runs out, so does life. It’s
important the parts get quickly fixed and the blood is restored to a useful
level. If not, the soldier becomes another piece of battlefield detritus. A
field medic has the ability to stop external blood flow - less internal. He
can replace blood with fluid but it’s not blood. He can treat for shock but
he can’t always stop it. He is at the mercy of his ability and the nature of
the wound. Bright red is surface bleeding he can manage but dark red, almost
tar-colored, is deep, visceral and beyond his ability to manage. Dark is the
essence of the casualty’s interior. He needs the help that only that sound
can bring. If an LZ exists, it’s wonderful and easy. If not, difficult
options remain. The bird weaves back and forth above the canopy as the pilot
struggles to find the location of the casualty. He begins a steady hover as
he lowers the litter on a cable. The gunner or helo medic looks down at the
small figures below and tries to wiggle the litter and cable through the
tall canopy to the small up-reaching figures below. In time, the litter is
filled and the cable retreats - the helo crew still carefully managing the
cable as it wends skyward. The cable hits its anchor, the litter is pulled
in and the pilot pulls pitch and quickly disappears - but the retreating
sound is heard by all and the silent universal thought - There but for the
Grace of God go I - and it will be to that sound.
"Cutting a landing
zone is a standard soldier task. Often, to hear the helicopter’s song, the
impossible becomes a requirement and miracles abound. Sweat-filled eyes,
blood blistered hands, energy-expended and with a breath of desperation and
desire, soldiers attack a small space to carve out sufficient open air for
the helicopter to land. Land to bring in what’s needed, take out what’s not
and to remind them that someone out there cares. Perhaps some explosives are
used - usually for the bigger trees but most often its soldiers and machetes
or the side of an e-tool. Done under the pressure of an encroaching enemy,
it’s a combination of high adrenalin rush and simple dumb luck - small
bullet, big space. In time, an opening is made and the sky revealed. A sound
encroaches before a vision. Eyes turn toward the newly created void and the
bird appears. The blade tips seem so much larger than the newly columned
sky. Volumes of dirt, grass, leaves and twigs sweep upward and are then
driven fiercely downward through the blades as the pilot struggles to do a
completely vertical descent through the narrow column he has been provided.
Below, the soldiers both cower and revel in the free-flowing air. The trash
is blinding but the moving air feels so great. Somehow, the pilot lands in a
space that seems smaller than his blade radius. In reverse, the sound builds
and then recedes into the distance - always that sound. Bringing and taking
away.
"Extraction is an emotional highlight of any soldier’s journey.
Regardless of the austerity and issues of the home base, for that moment, it
is a highly desired location and the focus of thought. It will be provided
by that familiar vehicle of sound. The Pickup Zone in the bush is relatively
open or if on an established firebase or hilltop position, a marked fixed
location. The soldiers awaiting extraction, close to the location undertake
their assigned duties - security, formation alignment or LZ marking. Each is
focused on the task at hand and tends to blot out other issues. As each
soldier senses his moment of removal is about to arrive, his auditory sense
becomes keen and his visceral instinct searches for that single sweet song
that only one instrument can play. When registered, his eyes look up and he
sees what his mind has imaged. He focuses on the sound and the sight and
both become larger as they fill his body. He quickly steps unto the skid and
up into the aluminum cocoon. Turning outward now, he grasps his weapon with
one hand and with the other holds the cargo ring on the floor - as he did
when he first arrived at this location. Reversing the flow of travel, he
approaches what he temporarily calls home. Landing again in a swirl of dust,
diesel and grinding sand, he offloads and trudges toward his assembly point.
The sounds retreat in his ears but he knows he will hear them again. He
always will."
About the author Keith Nightingale: COL Nightingale is
a retired Army Colonel who served two tours in Vietnam with Airborne and
Ranger (American and Vietnamese) units. He commanded airborne battalions in
both the 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment and the 82nd Airborne Division.
He later commanded both the 1/75th Rangers and the 1st Ranger Training
Brigade.
Dan Toothman, "Fang" MEDEVAC 19, 01 '69-01 '70 notified on
21 October, 2013: "I just got off the phone with the daughter of Dan Boyd,
whom I flew with in early 1969. He had a massive heart attack and passed
away last Thursday, 17 Oct. He and three other pilots came into the unit
from DUSTOFF in January or February of '69, because we were so short of
pilots. One of the others was CPT Tom Scofield (COL Ret.), who became the
Platoon Leader when CPT Bob Wood DEROSed. Dan was a wild and crazy guy and
we became good friends. His funeral will be at 1300hrs. this Friday at the
National Cemetery in Salisbury, NC, and the Patriot Guard will be there. Dan
was a big time Harley Davidson rider. If any of our members knew him and can
make it to the funeral and/or the wake at the Clemmons Presbyterian
Church in Clemmons, NC, near Winston Salem, NC, the family would love to
meet any of the guys he served with. Ann and I will be there. "
E-mail from Steve Bird to the Website says, "Thought you might find this
obituary for Capt. Breed, a former Doctor with the 15th MED, of interest for
posting on your Website. It appeared yesterday in the local newspaper. He
lived only a few miles from where I live. I wish I had of known that he
served with the 15th MED, I would have looked him up. I had an interesting
house guest this past weekend. Art Jacobs was in the area on business last
week and took delay in route home to visit Saturday and Sunday. We had a
great time! We talked about your dedication to the 15th MED Association."
Obit:
http://www.eagletribune.com/obituaries/x134962284/Dr-Putnam-P-Breed
From Quinn Becker: "Dr. I. Thomas, Bn. Surgeon 2-12 passed away last
week in CO. I will attempt to send you his obit. He was Sandy Meloys Surgeon
in '70/'71. Sadly Maj. Gen. Meloy died last week in San Antonio also."
Obit:
http://taborfuneralhome.com/fh/obituaries/obituary.cfm?o_id=2200839&fh_id=13067 .
The 2014 15th MED Assn. Reunion will be at: Renaissance Orlando Airport
Hotel, 5445 Forbes Place, Orlando, Florida 32812 Telephones -
1-407-240-1000, Toll-Free: 1-888-236-2427
If calling by phone
reference MEDEVAC Reunion 2014 to get MEDEVAC rate. Dates: Apr 2 to 6. Wed
to Sun. Reunion Coordinator: Leo "Short Round" Williams. E-mail:
dragin52@hotmail.com .
Always remembering our 1st Cav troops on duty
around the world; over and out.
FIRST TEAM!
Garryowen,
Mike
Bodnar C 2\7 '69
MEDEVAC 1-7\70
SO THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE