Dale,
Thanks for getting back to me so quick. I'm sorry you're not
included in
the VHPA, as you guys really saved our ass when we "marked
the enemy
position with a burning LOH". So hat's off to you.
I was there after you left, as I didn't arrive at D Troop from B
Company
until late June 1969. I was WIA in mid-September, so I wasn't
there
very long. My platoon leader was "Buddah Tom" Sinclair,
who took
over the platoon from someone else, whose name escapes me
(Odam?), who got shot down in flames (and survived). At least
that's the story I recall, after 30+ years. We also had an Aussie
pilot, John (can't remember his last name, I think it was Evans)
who flew "the Iron Butterfly" (LOH) and was shot down
three
times in LOH alley, before they refused to give him another
helicopter to fly. My crew was Steve Snoddy, crewchief, and
Rocky Rhodes, gunner. Rocky started to fly us out when I got
hit down south of Cu Chi on a last light mission. I've never
had the guts to find them or contact them. Something about
survivor guilt, I guess, although neither of them are on
"the wall".
I have been in the National Guard for over twenty years,
currently
pushing Shithooks around for the past ten years. Since they can't
find any "kids" who want to fly, they keep us old guys
around
(probably for laughs). There was a guy in our Guard unit who
was a D Troop Blue, having transferred from the Little Bears.
His name is Jack Orr, an American Indian. I didn't find him in
your 1968 picture, so he must have been there before you were.
He was with the Little Bears when "Spooky" the Asian
Brown
Bear mascot was just a cub. Jack has retired from the Guard
and is now a Native American Shaman in Reno, NV. He and I
used to talk about the old days in the Troop, when he wasn't
getting drunk and telling me that, as an Indian, he would have
to kill me when the fighting started again between the whites
and the Indians. He really was a great guy. Let me know if you
know
of him.
Anyway my name is Gary A. Jones, and I was a 22 year old (old
fart) LOH
pilot who was transfered from B Company, 25th Aviation Bn, 25th
Inf Div, on
June 25th, 1969. The story I was told that D Troop was down
aircraft (LOH)
and pilots due to combat losses, but my feeling was they
transferred me
because I was a pain in the ass, and didn't like taking orders,
especially
stupid orders. So I and my LOH, and I think a crew chief, ended
up coming
over to the Centaurs. They even loaned me the B Co. CO's jeep to
drag my
shit over to the Troop just to make sure there wasn't any delay.
There were
two slick pilots already with the Troop, who were classmates of
mine in
flight school: Randy Meade and "Sandy" Sandmeyer. I did
OK in the Troop
although my first body count was an ARVN who was in a patrol
along a river
to the west of Cu Chi. We didn't know the patrol was down there,
and as we
flew over they popped smoke, I saw the flash, thought it was a
muzzle flash
and told my crew to open up. Shortly after that we did take fire
from the
ARVN patrol, but who could blame them? On 12 September 1969, I
volunteered
to take a last light mission for my platoon leader, who had been
flying all
day, and his crew hadn't had a chance to eat. Also, last light
was a good
time for body count, and I think Bob (Fortier?) and I were tied
for highest
body count that month. We were working an area south of Cu Chi,
south of
the highway, in an open rice paddy area with a small stream and
one large,
dead tree. As we flew by the tree we saw a naked guy (he had been
taking a
bath in the stream) trying to pretend he was part of the tree. We
opened
fire on him and I think Steve even threw a grenade at him,
wounding him. I
then violated the LOH pilot's rule of never staying in one place
too long.
As I flew around the tree for about the third time, one of the
guy's buddies
jumped up out of a hole, stuck an AK47 in my door and pulled the
trigger. I
don't think he actually stuck it in the door, but it felt like
it, and my CE
Steve later told me the guy was "really close". Most of
the burst went by,
but one bullet him me in the leg, bounced off my chicken plate,
and went
through my right bicep, before exiting out the bubble over my
head. I guess
I was lucky it didn't bounce the other way, into my head. Anyway,
it blew
me off the controls, and Steve yelled at Rocky to take the
controls and
Rocky grabbed the sawed off broomstick we had for the gunners
cyclic, pulled
a hand full of pitch, and away we went. The higher we climbed the
better
target we became, and by this time the rest of the NVA company
had come up
out of their holes, and feeling they had nothing left to lose,
started
hosing us down pretty good. It looked like the 4th of July with
all the
red, white and green tracers. I grabbed the controls and put us
back in
the rice paddy a couple of hundred meters from where we had first
been hit.
Steve and Rocky got out with their M-60s and started shooting
while the
Cobra was making runs overhead trying to keep us from getting
killed. There
was blood (mine) all over the cockpit but I didn't seem to have
any broken
bones and I knew if we stayed there we were either going to be
dead meat or
POWs, neither of which really appealed to me at the time. So I
got the guys
back in the LOH and we started to low level out to the west. The
Cobra said
it looked like we were leaking fuel, we had been belly deep in
the flooded
rice paddy and water was draining out of the bottom of the LOH,
but I didn't
know that at the time. Also, I was starting to go into shock, and
was
saying really stupid things on the radio, I saw a dirt road
ahead, and slid
the LOH in on it. I shut the aircraft down just as a Little Bear
C&C slick
was landing, probably called in by the Cobra. After I shut the
helicopter
down, I walked (stupid macho shit) to the slick and got in. A
Sergeant
Major handed me a gauze bandage from the first aid kit (like what
am I
supposed to do with this?) and off we went to 12th Evac. I was
operated on
there and then medivacced to Japan a few days later for more
surgery and
eventually went home via Air Force medivac, to the San Diego Naval
Hospital
for unbelievably good food and really painful physical therapy.
After
convalescent leave, I was reassigned to Ft. Ord, Fritzche Army
Airfield,
where I remained (with a really bad attitude) until I ETSed on 31
March
1971. I returned to school and graduated from UC Riverside in
1972, got a
job as a juvenile probation officer for Riverside County, got
married, and
"settled down" as much as any of us ever did. In 1975 I
transferred to the
El Dorado County Probation Department in South Lake Tahoe, joined
the Nevada
National Guard in 1977, had a daughter, Erin, in 1980, transfered
to the
District Attorney's Office as a DA investigator in 1981, and will
retire
from almost 30 years of law enforcement on the 4th of July, this
year. (That
is one long, run on sentence). Well that's about it in a nutshell,
so I'd
better get this off to you and to the others, if I can remember
how to send
a cc. If I don't remember, please forward it on to someone who
gives a
shit, or can at least get my basic info on the website. Keep me
advised of
unit activities, as now that I'm going to be an old retired guy,
I need
something to keep me occupied. Thanks for taking the time to
respond, and
as caustic as I have been this letter, I do believe we have all
formed a
bond by our service in RVN, that transcends time and place. So,
welcome
home my friend, and thank you for a job well done.
Gary A. Jones
Diamond Head/Centaur
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