Login
Forgot Password?

OR

Login with Google Login with Twitter Login with Facebook
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • SuicideGirls
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
Vital Stats

motorfirebox

Pittsburgh

Member Since 2004

Followers 50 Following 64

  • Everything
  • Photos
  • Video
  • Blogs
  • Groups
  • From Others

Tuesday Jun 08, 2010

Jun 7, 2010
0
  • Facebook
  • Tweet
  • Email
I'd been working in Apache units, first 3/6 and now 1/6, for about two years. I was commo--I was squadron tech support, builder of LAN infrastructure, virus removal, and everything else to do with things that go beep--which meant that while I worked around the birds, I didn't every work with them. The Apaches have their own tech guys, who were as different from us computer jockeys as night from day.

A lot of soldiers in Apache units (and, I suspect, units everywhere) try to act blase about the birds themselves. You don't want to be the rubberneck, y'know? And after a while you do actually get to be blase about it, but me and the guy who'd been sent with me to hook up LAN lines in one of the troop buildings (A? B? can't remember) weren't there yet.

There's only one other guy there, one of the senior pilots named Wallenburg. We let him know we were done and started to head out, and he stops us and says, "You guys ever see the inside of one of those?" Pointing out the window at an AH-64. His, I guess. We play it cool, try to act like we're not kids going into the candy store as we walk out across the blacktop to the bird. I sat in the cockpit, waggled the stick that (I think) controlled the 30mm cannon, and tried to not make machine gun sounds with my mouth. It was really, really fucking cool.

In August, the whole squadron got woken up in the middle of the night and were instructed to form up. A bird had gone down. We loaded up in trucks, drove out to a likely spot, and chickenwalked over an entire mountain trying to find it. Spent all day. It got dark, and we rolled into what I think was a little retirement home--one-story apartment building with a big activity room and a central kitchen. We broke out MREs and caught a few hours of sleep sprawled all over the chairs in the activity room. The next morning, the people who lived there cooked us breakfast. To this day, I have no idea what the deal with that was--did we pay them to let us crash at their place? How did we get in contact with them to begin with? "Hi, yeah, I've got an entire squadron of sleepy-heads, wondering if we could have them nap on your chairs."

After eating, we drove out to a new location and chickenwalked another mountain. Our troop commander, I'd served in HHQ at another unit while he'd been running A Troop, and at the time he hadn't impressed me. Seemed kinda full of himself. That day, he coordinated our search operation, watched over us for signs of exhaustion, kept us appraised of news from other searches, and made us feel like we were running on more than six hours of sleep (to his two or three, I'm sure).

Word came in they'd found the bird, both pilots dead. They'd gotten lost on a late, foggy night, and crammed into the side of a mountain. Troop commander asked for volunteers to stay on the mountain and watch over the site until a recovery unit could get in there. I was lucky enough to be one of the first to step forward; he had to turn most of the troop away.

We ran it like any other field exercise. Set up our canvas, divvyed up the watch order, squared away our supplies (box of MREs and a pallet of boxed milk). The only major difference was that the watch list rotated more often than a normal watch would. Everybody spent four hours up at the site itself. The bird was broke as hell--just a stripped fuselage on turned earth. Next morning we packed up and headed back. A few days later, we had the service for 1LT Shannon and CW3 Wallenburg in the hangar.
thedarkness:
Dude, that sounds hard to deal with.
Jun 12, 2010
trevallion:
This is a really good story. The part about going to the cockpit reminds me of the first time I, as an engineering guy on a submarine, got to hang out in Control. I wanted to play with the periscope so bad. Bummer about the crash though.
Jun 30, 2010

More Blogs

  • 11.19.12
    1

    Monday Nov 19, 2012

    This is what passes as exotic at casa mfb: onion gnocchi with carrot …
  • 10.30.12
    3

    Tuesday Oct 30, 2012

    God damn. So, seriously: this is not a habit. My dinnering habits are…
  • 10.29.12
    2

    Monday Oct 29, 2012

    Read More
  • 10.24.12
    8

    Wednesday Oct 24, 2012

    Another night spent putting far too much work into what is essentiall…
  • 09.14.12
    7

    Friday Sep 14, 2012

    Tonight is White Trash Night at la casa de mfb. My parents never let…
  • 09.10.12
    2

    Monday Sep 10, 2012

    It'd be nice to have a brain that didn't, five days out of seven, dec…
  • 09.08.12
    3

    Sunday Sep 09, 2012

    So, wow. This happened two days ago and I still feel grossed out and …
  • 05.22.12
    3

    Tuesday May 22, 2012

    When my sister was in... middle school, I guess, she decided to try c…
  • 05.13.12
    2

    Sunday May 13, 2012

    Edit: that particular, um, witticism is probably best reserved for cl…
  • 05.06.12
    1

    Sunday May 06, 2012

    Yeah, spiked eggnog. Jesus. In my defense, I bought it in like March.…

We at SuicideGirls have been celebrating alternative pin-up girls for:

23
years
9
months
12
days
  • 5,509,826 fans
  • 41,393 fans
  • 10,327,617 followers
  • 4,593 SuicideGirls
  • 1,119,175 followers
  • 14,923,195 photos
  • 321,315 followers
  • 61,400,046 comments
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
  • Help
  • About
  • Press
  • LIVE

Legal/Tos | DMCA | Privacy Policy | 18 U.S.C. 2257 Record-Keeping Requirements Compliance Statement | Contact Us | Vendo Payment Support
©SuicideGirls 2001-2025

Press enter to search
Fast Hi-res

Click here to join & see it all...

Crop your photo