by Airman 1st Class Janelle Patiño
92nd Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs
6/24/2014 - FAIRCHILD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. -- Airmen
from the 36th Rescue Flight, an Air Education and Training Command
unit, answered the call to save not only one, but two lives in one
weekend.
On June 13 at 5:30 p.m., Capt. Berto Holt, the 36th RQF operations
supervisor, received a call that a kayaker was stranded 70 miles
southeast of Fairchild Air Force Base, Wash. Within a few hours, the
crew launched the UH-1N Huey and was enroute to the man's location.
The individual had been kayaking where Marble Creek flows into the St.
Joe's River when his board flipped over, ejecting him into the cold
water.
"There were some challenges that occurred during the rescue due to the
weather, but the crew of Rescue 48 never gave up," said Maj. Jennings
Marshall, the 36th RQF commander. "At 8:30 p.m., Capt. Nate Jolls, a
36th RQF pilot, with the survivor on board, began an approach back
toward the ambulance where Maj. Montsho Corppetts, a 336th Training
Support Squadron medic, was waiting."
Two days later, on June 15, the crew received a call at approximately
11:30 a.m. that there was an injured hiker along the Pacific Crest Trail
in Northern Washington needing quick extraction.
"He had been walking along a steep and snowy section of the trail when
he slipped and tumbled down the mountainside, hitting a tree and
breaking several ribs," Marshall said. "Fortunately, his hiking buddy
was able to call for help."
Capt. Erik Greendyke, the 36th RQF operations supervisor, worked with
Marshall to assemble a crew. The crew then launched at 1 p.m. and
followed the Methow River past Mazama, Wash., to the hiker's location.
"Other hikers prepared a bright orange tent along the ridgeline that
helped us immediately identify the area with minimal searching,"
Marshall said. "As soon as we rescued the injured hiker and his hiker
buddy, the survivor was then loaded onto an ambulance with the help of
Capt. Josiah Hart, the 36th RQF standardization and evaluation liaison
officer, and Staff Sgt. Nicholas Poe, a 36th RQF special missions
aviator, and departed for the hospital."
Helicopter rescue operations can be dangerous, but the 36th RQF crews
constantly train to maintain proficiency in rescue operations as part of
the mission to support the Air Force's only Survival, Evasion,
Resistance and Escape school.
"We take great effort to ensure rescues are executed safely and with as
little risk as possible," Marshall said. "Our normal training missions
take place at Fairchild and in the Colville National Forest and we have
been tasked to perform civilian rescues throughout the Pacific Northwest
in Washington, Idaho, Oregon and Montana."
Bart Rayniak, the kayaker survivor, was happy that the U.S. Air Force was there to rescue him.
"I was never able to truly thank my rescuers. They were so wonderful!
They put their lives on the line to save mine," Rayniak said. "They were
amazing flyers and crew. They were professional and caring. Damn good
at what they do. I will always be grateful."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment