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04/19/26 08:43 PM #17089    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Officers

OK, as I recall somewhere in my Civilian Career with the Army, our trained Physician Assistants, who were always Warrant Officers, had their rankings changed to that of bona fide Lieutenants.

Jim


04/20/26 11:32 AM #17090    

 

Deborah Alexander (Rogers)

Happy Birthday, Janie!  Hope you have a great one, and many more!

Debbie


04/20/26 11:49 AM #17091    

 

John Maxwell

Happy Birthday Janie! Hope you are feeling well enough to party all night.
You are sure loved by all of us alums, for all you and Clare have done for us in the past, and you continue to do. As we say at the Village, HIP HIP HUZZAH!! You are dear.

04/20/26 11:51 AM #17092    

 

John Maxwell

Happy Birthday Janie. Hip Hip Huzzah!! Now go party all night. Woo Hoo! I see you smilin.

04/20/26 01:35 PM #17093    

 

David Mitchell

Yes Janie, Happy Birthday!

And thank you. You certainly have made life a little more enjoyable for those of us on the Forum, especially those of us "out-of-towners".


04/20/26 09:25 PM #17094    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Janie,

Definitely a sincere Happy Birthday wish!

You have brightened our days and kept us together now for many years on this Forum!

Along with others I send my gratitude for your efforts which have allowed us to remember the old days and celebrate, share and commiserate our many decades since those years at BWHS. 

As Bob Hope used to sing "Thanks for the memories".

Jim


04/21/26 01:59 PM #17095    

 

Michael McLeod

who's this janie person?

jk!

xxxx janie person!!!

you really have been a delightful virtual hostess. the connectedness to old friends and soft-focus memories is a joy, particularly, I bet, to out-of-towners like me. 

Looking forward to a visit to Columbus in September. Fall was always my favorite season and they don't have one of those down here in Fla. 


04/21/26 03:50 PM #17096    

 

Michael McLeod

I'm often tempted to post stories from the news but don't want to be two newshoundy.

Can't resist sharing this, from the ny times.It's from a regular column that takes on ground-level ethical issues, addressing situations that call for honesty and compassion and overall polite behavior and respect for each other. I guess it's good advice, but I would have just said "If she's hot, why not?" Now you know why I never wrote for the New York Times.

 

Can I Skip My 100-Year-Old Father’s Wedding? He’s Making a Big Mistake.

My 100-year-old father is about to marry a 75-year-old woman who is a three-time widow. He met her in church, and after one month I believe she pressured him to get married. My siblings and I are all against the wedding. I’ve spent more time with our father than my siblings have over the past five months, during their courtship, and I’ve seen firsthand many red flags. For example, my father loves tennis (he played on his 100th birthday), but now, because his girlfriend is jealous of him playing with other women, he’s stopped doing so, and is beginning to show signs of decline. We’ve discussed the potential problems associated with a 25-year age difference, but he doesn’t believe that his girlfriend would do anything to harm him because she is religious.

I can’t attend this wedding in good conscience. My siblings are going, but I’m heartbroken by what I fear this union will do to our father and our family. I don’t see how I can put on a phony smile and hug a three-time black widow as she marries No. 4, my father. Am I wrong? — Name Withheld

From the Ethicist:

You’ve expressed your apprehensions; consider the possibility that your father is less starry-eyed than you suppose. He may simply think that, even if his money is part of the draw, this woman’s companionship during life’s last stretch would be worth it. If you’re worried that his health is declining in his 101st year because he isn’t exercising as much, see if there’s a way that you might be able to help with this. If you and your sibs have concerns about financial exploitation, consult with a lawyer and explore protective measures your father could take.

Sitting out his wedding, however, risks alienating him for whatever time remains to him. So ask yourself why you’re prepared to be the lone holdout. When people are upset that their advice has gone unheeded, there are often two things going on. Yes, they’re worried that someone is making a bad decision, but they also feel hurt that their perspective hasn’t been properly valued. Think about how much you might be affected by that second emotion. Think too about how the desire to protect can sometimes turn into a desire to control.

Whatever doubts you have about your father’s choice, I hope you’ll decide to witness his happiness on the big day. Staying part of his life will make it easier to intervene and to support your father if you later see developments that are unambiguously worrying. In the meantime, you might want to get to know your new stepmother better. Maybe she has her good points, too.


04/22/26 02:25 PM #17097    

 

Michael McLeod

 

Thanks to all for the kind feedback from the folks who took the time to read that lengthy "true crime" article I posted.That may have been the longest article I ever wrote.

Now I think  need a transfusion. Nicked up by bougainvllia thorns.  Six feet tall bushes with beautful pink blooms in my backyard  desperately needed to be cut back because of a rare florida frost..

The bouganvillea bushes will recover and  guess  will too. Shoulda worn gloves. With a long sleeve shirt.

 


04/22/26 05:58 PM #17098    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike McL.,

Watch out for thorny plants, especially roses. Some thorns are contaminated with a fungus, Sporotricum (now called Sporothrix) schenckii, which can cause an interesting ascending nodular skin infection, sporotrichosis. It more commonly occurs in rose growers and ascinds up the lymph nodes of the arm after a thorn punctures a hand or arm.

As an intern I diagnosed a case at Riverside that was rare enough for me to present at a Grand Rounds. A lady came into the ER with a series of painless lumps forming along her lower arm up to her elbow. My resident called me to see her in the ER because she (the resident) was stumped at such a rash. I examined the patient, looked at the pattern of the nodules and asked her one question: ,"Do you grow roses?" "Why, yes." she replied.

Fungal cultures from the nodules grew out S. schenckii. The patient responded well to antifungal drug therapy.

That was one of those "diagnostic coup moments" that house staff doctors in their training years cherish 😀!

Jim


04/22/26 11:43 PM #17099    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Not being as elegant in my writing as Mike or Dave I ask you to bear with me on this.

Tomorrow, Thursday, will be my Brother-In-Law's (Joe N.) 82nd birthday.  My wife and I are driving down, South and a litle West about an hour, to have lunch with Joe and his wife..  Joe orignally move out to the Bay area for his first big job.  Joe worked for a number of years as a skater with Shipstad and Johnson's Ice Follies.  Afterward he work in management for an insurance company in San Fransisco.  Eventually he switched to Financial advisor for a small firm in San Rafael, rom which he eventually retired.   Joe's dad, a second generation doctor got him interessted in fishing and hunting which he persued all of his adult life.  Joe also stayed with skating by playing in an amateur hockey team.  They generally played their games at the Snoopy Arena in Santa Rosa.

A few years ago Joe was diagnosed with Parkinsons disease.  In the past few months he was diagnosed with the beginnings of Dementia.  His wife, being of poor health herself, as determined that he would be better off in a "nursing" type facility and has been attempting to find a place with an opening.  We are waiting.

From what I know, and Jim would know, Parkinsons patients often develop Dementia.

We're hoping for the best.    


04/23/26 09:21 AM #17100    

 

Michael McLeod

In honor of national poetry month here is my favorite robert frost poem. enjoy. i love it so much i know the whole dang thing by heart. i think it's about living life with hope, positivity -- and faith. I love the resonance of the last line. Better yet the last word, tying it all up in a simple, splendid knot.

Frost had such a gift of saying something so profound without sounding preachy, 

(ps thanks for the med tip, jim!)

 

The Onset

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Always the same, when on a fated night

At last the gathered snow lets down as white

As may be in dark woods, and with a song

It shall not make again all winter long

Of hissing on the yet uncovered ground,

I almost stumble looking up and round,

As one who overtaken by the end

Gives up his errand, and lets death descend

Upon him where he is, with nothing done

To evil, no important triumph won,

More than if life had never been begun.

Yet all the precedent is on my side:

I know that winter death has never tried

The earth but it has failed: the snow may heap

In long storms an undrifted four feet deep

As measured against maple, birch, and oak,

It cannot check the peeper’s silver croak;

And I shall see the snow all go down hill

In water of a slender April rill

That flashes tail through last year’s withered brake

And dead weeds, like a disappearing snake.

Nothing will be left white but here a birch,

And there a clump of houses with a church.


04/23/26 09:26 AM #17101    

 

John Jackson

Yikes - Sporotricum schenckii - it even sounds creepy!  At our age, we don’t need something else to worry about.

Or is it Sporothrix  schenckii? I’m tempted to say a rose fungus by any other name is just as scary.


04/23/26 12:23 PM #17102    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

John J.

Yes, fungi can be really bad actors especially if they get in the bloodstream (fungicemia) or the brain (fungal meniningitis and others). Such things are always a consideration in immunosuppressed and/or cancer patients who present with fevers, sepsis, etc.

Unlike the Beatles, we may all not live in a "Yellow Submarine" but we do all exist and co-exist in a microbial   ðŸ¦    world 🤔.

Jim

 


04/23/26 04:48 PM #17103    

 

John Jackson

I usually avoid posting Onion articles because many are in very poor taste, but this one is too good to pass up.

Study Finds Gen Z Drinking Fewer Flagons Of Mead Than Medieval Generations

ST. LOUIS—Revealing a drastic decline in regular honey-wine consumption among youths, a new study published by researchers at Saint Louis University found that Generation Z drinks far fewer flagons of mead than medieval generations did. “We observed that, as opposed to their predecessors, young adults today seldom venture out to their local mead hall and socialize with tavern wenches,” said lead researcher Michael Kempe, noting that the study’s conclusions also align with a recent downswing in attendance at jousting matches. “Over the years there has been, for some reason, a noticeable reduction in quaffing a goat’s horn overflowing with mead after vanquishing a beast. Perhaps with marijuana use and vaping on the rise, it’s natural to see the market for crude, sickly sweet fermented beverages shrink. In addition, Gen Z seems to be more frugal when it comes to indulgences like tossing a coin to a lyre player to regale one’s fellow bannermen with a jaunty ballad.” Kempe added that due to the increased dominance of the internet, there was also a steady downtick in youths passing down long poems through oral tradition.


04/24/26 12:18 PM #17104    

 

Michael McLeod

Does anybody else remember getting lots of lectures about how many english language words have latin roots? Or do i only remember that because it was drilled into me by my devout mother, who was an english major and a well educated doctor's daughter who grew up next to the old Holy Rosary church on main street and was on the way to  becoming a nun, a "bride of Christ " as they used to say, before she fell in love with my dad.

Jim: thanks for the advice and that's a great insider med yarn. You obviously, um, rose to the occasion.

 


04/24/26 01:01 PM #17105    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

It may be because my thoughts were elsewhere and I don't have access to the many news outlets that Mr. Mike has, but this morning I learned that once again "Millions of Americans (USA)may now be considered Canadian under a new (somewhat) law.

A recent change to Canada's requirements that took affect December 15th allows ANYONE born before that date who could prove they have a direct Canadian ancestor - a grandparent, great-grandparent or even more distant ancestor cna become a dual citizen.  Those born on or after December 15 need to show that their Canadian parent lived in Canada for 1,095 days.

So once again my Nieces and Nephews are Dual citizens, just need to provide paperwork..


04/24/26 05:29 PM #17106    

 

David Mitchell

John,

As for this recent downswing in attendance at jousting matches.

I just hate when that hppens!


04/25/26 08:20 AM #17107    

 

Michael McLeod

For the benefit of anybody who doesn't already know it by heart,eh?

I'm looking at you, Joe. 

Dave: I just hate it when that happens.

 

 

 

Lyrics

O Canada!

Our home and native land!
True patriot love in all of us command.
With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The True North strong and free!
From far and wide,
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
God keep our land glorious and free!
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.

 

 

 


04/25/26 06:30 PM #17108    

 

John Jackson

Oh Canada! Just got back from a short trip to Montreal  for a concert by a wonderful  band that plays what can best be described as French Canadian folk music.   It’s hard to describe but it has a lot of  Irish/Scottish fiddling, combined with lusty singing that sounds like songs lumberjacks would sing.  The group had two fiddlers, a guitarist, an accordionist and a guy that plays the hurdy gurdy.  Best hurdy gurdy playing I’ve heard in many a moon (since I’ve only heard hurdy gurdy once before at a Loreena McKennitt concert).

The other hallmark of this type of music is that one of the band members (while seated) taps his feet  in complex rhythmic patterns to provide percussion. The clip below is a good one with a two minute stretch at the end that rivals the best Irish fiddling but there is no hurdy gurdy:

 

We were a bit apprehensive about how Americans would be received as citizens of a rogue nation whose President has gone out of his way to insult and belittle our oldest and best friends.  But everywhere we went we experienced only warmth and friendliness.  


04/26/26 12:07 PM #17109    

 

Michael McLeod

John: I met enough canadian soldiers when I was stationed at a NATO hq near heidelberg germany to relate to your experience way up north. They were absolutely the nicest guys to be around. Swear to God it just made me and the krauts in our unit happy to be around them. The US should have an exchange program with canada. If you had a bratty little brother you could swap him out to a canadian family, let them send you one of theirs while they tolerantly file the rough edges off your little snotnosed brat for you. I promise you he'll come back with a permanent pleasant expression on his face, walking around saying: "how's it going, eh?"

I am joking around but in all seriousness I bonded with canadians when I was in the service easier than I bonded with anybody else including fellow gi's. I knew a little german and so I drank with the krauts, my lord the beer is indeed great over there, and they were not as friendly as the canukes. I'm sure there are plenty of butthole canadians but not in my experience.

 


04/26/26 05:07 PM #17110    

 

David Mitchell

I just came across an incredible story about a Polish Catholic woman named Irene Sendler.

She lived in Warsaw and over 2 years, snuck 2,500 small jewish children out of the ghetto and into the hands of various non-Jewish families, including some Catholic convents.

I beleive she was caught once and ecaped, but just before the war ended she was caught again and tortured - breakiing her arms and legs.

She used fake names and often carried little ones out in luggage, bags, and boxes

then she burried jars with their real names, which were located later.

But here is a weird twist to the story. In 2007, she was finally nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize among 180 other people. But the final winner was Al Gore, for his power point study about global warming!

Go figure?


04/29/26 11:02 AM #17111    

 

Michael McLeod

.

The thing I like most about journalism was that I got to go to places I never would have encountered otherwise and met people I never would have met and then tried to describe those people and places so well that readers would feel like they were right there with me. Here's one I wrote many years ago and  I thought I'd share.it.

You may not realize it but florida is not just beaches but a southern state with lots of open country the tourists never see and this is a story I wrote about one such place.

Usually I'd consider it an insult if you told me a story of mine was all bull. In this case I'd consider it a compliment. Forgive me if i've imposed it upon you before.

 
BUCKING FOR STARDOM
Author
By Michael Mcleod | Orlando Sentinel
PUBLISHED: February 15, 2003 at 12:00 AM EST | UPDATED: October 25, 2018 at 2:16 PM E
Once it gets south of Kissimmee, Canoe Creek Road doesn’t take long to straighten out into two straight, flat, open-country lanes, cutting through miles of scruffy cattle grasslands and cypress domes. Nothing much to keep you company out here unless you count the eagles gliding overhead and the buzzards dining on the berm.
Just before Kenansville, there’s a barn, a corral, and a fence line across the grassland that slopes toward the shore of Lake Marian. This place is a wildlife sanctuary, of sorts. Nothing endangered or exotic here. Just distant clumps of horses and bulls — wild ones, all.The 1,600-acre spread, an old ranch owned by the Silver Spurs Rodeo, serves as the year-round home for the rodeo’s “rough stock.” They are the animals used in bull riding, bareback riding and saddle bronc riding competition — always the highlights of the rodeo, which is going on this weekend in Kissimmee.
Most rodeos get their bucking animals from stock contractors, who bring the bulls and horses in from miles away. But ever since its first go-round 59 years ago, Silver Spurs has been a self-contained, volunteer operation.
That includes the rough stock. The rodeo maintains its own herd of bucking animals, roughly 40 bulls and as many horses. Most of them are owned outright by the rodeo, but a few others are on loan, having been “discovered” by Central Florida cattlemen who saw a promising spiritedness in one of their own animals and volunteered it for a life in the rodeo.
Animals are unpredictable, and the vast majority of rodeo recruits, no matter how much fussing and kicking they did around the barn, are a flop in the arena, bucking half-heartedly, or not at all.
But every now and then a superstar comes along. Such is the case with Cold Cold Heart.
Cold Cold Heart is an 1,800-pound, chocolate brown, 7-year-old, crossbred Brahman bucking bull owned by prominent Osceola cattleman Doug Partin, 64, one of the descendants of the venerable Osceola County ranching clan. Its scion, “Geech” Partin, was a founding member of the riding club that helped start up the rodeo 59 years ago. For the past 30 years, Partin has been a key rodeo volunteer, taking care of the rough stock and scouting for promising buckers to add to the Silver Spurs herd.
“He’s come up with some doozies,” says fellow volunteer and rough stock manager Kevin Whaley.
Cold Cold Heart is a doozie.
The bull has yet to be ridden for a full eight seconds, the time a rider must cling to a bull to score points. Dozens have tried, and dozens have failed. The longest any cowboy has stayed on Cold Cold Heart is four seconds.
But it’s more than his unbeaten record that makes Cold Cold Heart a local livestock favorite. It’s the ostentatious nature of his debut.
Three years ago, Cold Cold Heart did something that a bull is not supposed to do, something that local rodeo enthusiasts regard as a freakish athletic accomplishment along the lines of Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 points in a game or Don Larsen’s World Series no-hitter.
In a rodeo that was held at the Kissimmee Silver Spurs Arena 2000, Cold Cold Heart bolted out of the chute, bucked off a rider with one arching jump, ran 50 yards across the arena, gathered himself just before reaching a 6-foot tall fence, and jumped over it like a thoroughbred horse clearing a hurdle.
“It was entertaining,” says Osceola rancher and Silver Spurs committee member George Kemfer.
Bulls are not sleek and angular and mobile in the way that horses are. Horses are quarterbacks and wide receivers. Bulls are offensive linemen. Horses are sculpted out of wood. Bulls are poured from cement, powerful in a pile-driver sort of way, big square compressed slabs of muscle that can corkscrew and shimmy and plunge.
Next time out, Cold Cold Heart did the same thing. Rider — gone. Fence — cleared. He also charged straight through a chain-link fence outside the arena and narrowly avoided steamrolling over a rodeo hand and a spectator or two as he tried to circle back to the holding pen to rejoin his fellow bulls.
Handlers finally broke the bull of his steeplechase ambitions by clustering a few of Cold Cold Heart’s fellow bulls together inside the arena and in front of the fence whenever he jumped, so he wouldn’t feel the need to go looking for his friends.
But he remains a formidable animal.
“He’s just a kicker. He jumps awful high. He’s got a lot of drop to him,” says Partin.
Raising good bucking bulls has become a big business in some parts of the country. Some bulls sell for tens of thousands of dollars. But Partin won’t get much of anything besides bragging rights out of whatever success Cold Cold Heart might have. All Silver Spurs rodeo proceeds go to charity.
Partin watches over the rough stock for the love of it. He is encyclopedic in his knowledge, serving as the one-man, institutional memory of the herd, ticking off where each colt came from, which bull just came up lame, how that mare always favors her right hind leg.
You do not generally expect people to be sentimental about a big, mean animal with horns and hooves. Partin has cause to be particularly attached to Cold Cold Heart.
The animal was picked out when it was young by Partin’s only son, Chris. Chris was killed in 1995 when his pickup truck caught the shoulder, spun out of control, and flipped over on one of those lonely stretches of Canoe Creek Road.
It’s partly because of that attachment, says Doug Partin, that he wants to see Cold Cold Heart succeed.
But in the bucking business, there is a fine line between good and too good. Cowboys like to have an aggressive bull to ride because the harder it bucks, the more likely they are to get a high score if they can ride the bull for the full eight seconds.
On the other hand, as Cold Cold Heart’s notoriety has spread, more and more cowboys have refused to ride the bull, assuming that it’s a waste of their time to even try. Partin lent Cold Cold Heart out to a Louisiana stock contractor, James Harper, in the hopes that Harper could get the animal in a rodeo somewhere where an ambitious cowboy could stay aboard for the duration.
Still no luck.
“That bull needs to be ridden,” says Partin.
The next cowboy to give it a go will be Chad Lovern, of Philadelphia, Mo., who drew Cold Cold Heart in the first set of bull rides scheduled for Sunday afternoon.

 


04/29/26 04:58 PM #17112    

 

David Mitchell

 My Wildest 8 OR 10 Minutes - Ever!

 

            While I was home for my 30-day leave between tours (my first full 12 months tour, and my voluntary six-month extension), we had gotten a new Troop (Company) Commander. He had a bit of a nervous presence, and he made you feel nervous just being around him. His hand shook as he held a cigarette, and he drank heavily, and often, at the Officers Club. He always had to have a more mportant thing to say - a funnier joke - the last word. He would often hog the convrsation in childish ways. To be blunt - he made us all nervous.

 

 

            When I returned, I had asked to be allowed to leave the Scout platoon for a safer role in our mission. Flying as a Scout was voluntary and for only six months. But most of us who flew in the Scout platoon stayed with it for the full year. We were a tight group. Three of our guys who also extended their tour, stayed in Scouts for eighteen months. Yikes! When I got back, I sat in the Major’s office and said something to the effect of “I really can’t take this anymore. Can’t we find something else for me to fly?” The Major was quick to respond. “We could sure use another co-pilot for us in the “C&C”. “Great”,  I said. Done deal.

 

 

            I would fly as a co-pilot rotating between the Major himself, our XO, Captain Bud Beauchamp, (a good guy), and our Operations Officer (whose name I cannot recall - I flew with him a lot less often). I would now get a day off a little more often, and I would be flying at 500 feet, instead of ten or twenty feet. I was so relieved at the idea - it would be so much safer.                                                         Or so I thought. 

 

 

TBC

 

 


04/29/26 05:46 PM #17113    

 

David Mitchell

My WILDEST 8 or 10 MINUTES - EVER!   Continued

(SORRY, I CANNOT GET THE FONT SIZES RIGHT)

 

One of my first few times out with the Major was to be my craziest day ever! We were working out of either Vi Thanh or Roc Gia, and we were coming off our lunch break. Yes, we always stopped for lunch unless we were actually in a live “contact”. The team of Scout Pilots on this rotation were two good buddies, Warrant Officer Jack Abbott (one of the jokesters of our group), and Warrant Officer Bob Tow, who had become a really good Cobra gunship pilot, until he suddenly quit. He had experienced three engine failures in about one month and refused to get back in a Cobra cockpit again.

 

            I was flying the Major’s left seat, and I was “at the stick” (flying the ship) at the time. This day we had a “Backseat” - a ground forces officer sitting behind us - in radio contact with us pilots, as well as his own ground forces beneath us. But there weren’t any of his forces below us at the moment.

 

            The Major was being his “unusual” self. Instead of sitting quietly in his right seat, he had his chicken plate off and was up on his knees, turned around backward, kneeling on his seat, talking small talk to our “backseat” (while I’m trying to listen to our Scouts). And to add to the list of no no’s, he was smoking a cigarette in the cockpit. And oh yes, one more complication, he was insisting that I fly our circle above the Scouts in a clockwise direction so he could see them easier out his side of the ship. This made it very difficult for me to see them, as I had to look across the top of the instrument panel and around him blocking the view below. Needless to say, I was pretty irritated with him. Normally, we would fly the circle in either direction, so that whoever was at the controls could look down directly and see them easily out his door window.

            

            Now the two Scouts, Jack and Bob, were coming under fire from what we used to call a “one-shot-Charley”. A single round kept coming up at them every time they came back around to this one point in their circle, but they couldn’t locate the source of fire exactly. He kept waiting until the lead (Jack) had passed and he would shoot at Bob - the “Wing” man - the second one over the target. After a couple of circles Jack asked Bob to take the Lead, so Jack (the more experienced) would be the one getting shot at and he might be able to see where the guy shooting at them was. 

 

            But on their first circle in this reverse order, several more AK-47s opened up, and Bob’s ship was hit and went down. Bob got his Loach on the ground, upright, but in flames. The fire was not the entire ship - a fuel tank fire - but a small pinpoint fire that we think occurred from a “Willie Pete” (white phosphorus) grenade that his observer had attempted to toss out the door but instead had dropped it on the rigging of the mini-gun mounted just below his left door. 

 

            It was normal for the “C&C” ship to go down and recover our Scouts when they were shot down - not just normal but expected. I immediately started into a steep corkscrew descent - way too steep at first. My initial overreaction almost caused a main rotor “overspeed” - a serious mistake with dangerous mechanical consequences. I quickly corrected our circular dive, and we finally leveled out and came to a hover just a few yards behind Bob’s burning ship. 

 

            As I made my spiral descent, it felt like I was flying deeper into a pool of fear. The lower we dropped, the stronger the fear enveloped me. When we reached the bottom and I hovered about ten yards behind Bob’s ship, I think I had slipped into some form of shock. Then I felt a complete absence of fear - almost numb. Everything was now moving in slow motion, and all the sounds were coming through a very distant, strained speaker. And my vision seemed hyper clear!

 

            Meanwhile our two Cobras had begun working over the location of the source of fire (now about 70 yards out our left door) with rockets and mini guns, adding to the noise and confusion. My left door gunner was firing his door-mounted M-60 machine gun and I recall hearing his spent cartridges clinking on the floor beneath his seat. I took one long, slow (and very calm), sweeping look to my left so see the two or three AK-47s firing at us from the tree line across the rice paddy. As usual, the tracers coming at us were high. They were often high. It was like I was floating in space - almost an out-of-body experience. 

 

 TBC

 


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