War Stories 4

Enjoy the stories in this section. Some of them may even have been true!! Have a favorite war story you've been relating over the years? Well sit down and shoot us a draft of it. Don't worry, we'll do our best to correct grammar, punctuation, and spelling before we publish it. to us and we'll publish them for all to enjoy.

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First Two UH-1H Aircraft Assigned to 15th Med Bn
By MAJ Larry G. Hatch (USA Ret)
WO Call Sign: Mercy 11

WO Arthur Martin and I were flown to Vung Tau to take delivery of the first two new UH-1H helicopters, an improvement over the D model’s L-11 engine versus the much more powerful L-13 engine. We both had a crew chief along to assist and fill the other front pilot’s seat.

While flying the two aircraft in trail formation up the coastline towards home base, the helicopter I was flying lost all its hydraulic fluid, and the hydraulic warning light came on. Beings you can’t hover the aircraft with the hydraulics out, they teach running landings in flight school to deal with these situations. So, when I was adjacent to Cam Rahn Bay Air Base, I radioed the Army Airfield next to the base for permission to make an emergency running landing. I made a shallow, 12-degree approach, keeping my airspeed up until touching the aircraft’s skids down on the very first part of the PSP runway. I had to get the crew chief to help put downward pressure on the collective stick to help take pitch out of the rotor blades and slow us down. As it was, the helicopter slid down three-fourths of the runway before stopping. I made a picture-perfect, flight school, textbook landing. The Major in charge of the airfield came running out and chewed me up one side and down the other for landing at “his” airfield. Well, excuse me. Mr. Martin let him have both barrels.

We left the broken helicopter there and flew home in the other one. Mr. Martin flew back the next day with maintenance personnel and fixed the helicopter. When the helicopter was being built, a mechanic crimped one of the hydraulic line fittings so badly that it leaked at the fitting. The leak wasn’t found after the helicopter was first test-flown back in the United States. My 45-minute flight was all it took to pump out all the hydraulic fluid.

Unbeknownst to me, Mr. Martin had saved the crimped hydraulic fitting and had it made into a plaque I was given when departing Vietnam in December 1967. That plaque is hanging on the wall in my den.

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Coast Mission
By MAJ Larry G. Hatch (USA Ret)
WO Call Sign: Mercy 11


WO1 Hatch

Right after the mission on 8 April 1967, where both CPT Eldon Ideus and I were wounded, I was sent up North along the coastline in support of some Marine Corps operations to give me a break from the action. Well, I flew out of the frying pan into the fire. I was in deep doo-doo on my very first mission. The pickup was right on the coastline of the South China Sea. The only vegetation between the rice patties and the Sea was these patches of 20-feet high willows, among other smaller trees. The unit on the ground popped a smoke grenade; I identified the color of the smoke and was approaching the LZ when 15 feet off the ground, all hell broke loose. I wasn’t flying at the controls because I was breaking in a new pilot, so I was looking out my pilot’s left door window looking at the mudflats and water on the ground when I found myself staring down a rifle barrel. A Viet Cong (VC) dressed in all black (typical dress), barefooted, squatted down on the mud bank, was pointing his rifle at me. He fired and the round went between my feet, hit the cyclic stick, severed wiring, which resulted in my side of the cockpit filling up with smoke. At the same time, we were taking automatic weapons fire, and I was telling my co-pilot on my radio headset to “Get the hell out of here.” Well, you are in your most vulnerable position when you are slowing the aircraft’s descent for landing and you pull up the collective to get airborne. The helicopter’s rotor blade speed immediately starts to bleed off. I guess it was my instructor pilot’s instinct, but I had taken over the controls, held the RPM bleed off to 6000 RPM (down from 6600 RPM) and was able to start moving forward as the rotor blades were chopping up those willows like a lawnmower. At least we weren’t crash landing. It seemed like we flew through those willows forever until we flew out of them, turned right towards the rice paddies with the helicopter’s skids about 5 feet off the ground as I was trying to gain airspeed and slowly lowering the collect to increase RPM. As you can probably determine that combination of forward cyclic stick to gain airspeed and downward collective to gain rotor RPM without hitting the ground was tricky. To top things off, I was trying to see through a cloud of smoke from burning wire, RPM warning indicator bleeping constantly and whatever else was going on to keep the aircraft flying. Can you imagine a Vietnamese rice farmer standing up, pushing his dugout canoe along the rice paddy using a long pole, and I’m flying straight at him, true story? I’ll bet he filled his pants before he bailed out into the paddy. I didn’t hit the pole or the farmer, but I didn’t alter my flight path; I figured I was the one with the emergency and besides, I had the right-of-way (come to think of it, maybe not). I still laugh thinking about it (the farmer, not the mission).

After two harrowing missions within three days of each other, they sent me on R&R to Hawaii on 19 August 1967. I wanted to go to Australia and see those beautiful ladies they kept showcasing in the “Stars & Stripes” newspaper but, Hawaii was better than nothing.

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An Lo Valley Ambush
By MAJ Larry G. Hatch (USA Ret)
WO Call Sign: Mercy 11

CPT Eldon Ideus and I (WO Larry Hatch) were making a medevac pick-up in the An Lo Valley outside of LZ English. While I was flying downwind, I couldn't help but think how beautiful the elephant grass looked; it was like a golf course fairway lined on both sides by palm trees. I made my final approach to an infantry soldier standing waist-high in the grass, holding a smoke flare. I was flaring the helicopter for landing, when at 15 ft. all hell broke loose. The VC had set up an ambush, and we were taking automatic weapons fire from the palm trees as well as the ground.  

Our wounds were attended to, and CPT Ideus was medevaced back to the United States. I sure was going to miss old "Magnet Ass Ideus," as I called him, for every time we flew together, we got the hell shot out of the aircraft. Our Maintenance Officer, WO Arthur Martin, and Technical Inspector SP6 Clyde Moore counted 127 bullet holes through the aircraft (exit holes were not counted). We were lucky that day. MAJ Goodman told me that I needed to relax and get away from the action, so I was sent up North along the coastline in support of the Marines. The very first mission proved to be no better than the last bullet-riddled mission in the An Lo Valley. But that's another war story to read about on our Web site. 

 

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