22 July 2004

Cargo

Jaf was tired. Dog ass tired. He had flown everyday for the past nine days and was again preparing for another mission in the pre-dawn hours of the already hot morning. A review of the logbook showed that the maintenance crew had repaired the radar altimeter during the night, he made a note to check it before the pilots arrived.

Just as he was about to start the auxiliary power unit, a large two and a half ton truck pulled up to the rear of the CH47 helicopter filled with several large shipping containers. Jaf and Kevin both stopped what they were doing and walked to the edge of the ramp. They hadn’t expected so much internal cargo. After listening to the explanation from the driver, they shrugged and began stowing the red nylon seats running along both sides of the cabin to make room for all the large, green containers made of a very hard plastic.

Jaf asked himself why he hadn’t joined the Air Force as he and Kevin and the driver man-handled the heavy cumbersome crates into the cabin, lining them up side by side all the way down the middle. Then stacking another row on top of the first. He was sure that flight engineers in the Air Force don’t ordinarily load cargo. As his brown t-shirt began to soak with sweat he wondered what the hell was in the heavy containers and felt stupid when his eye caught “COMMO EQUIPMENT” stenciled in white three-inch letters on each lid.

The now empty truck drove away as he and Kevin began methodically criss-crossing a series of 5,000 lb cargo straps across the stacked green cases, cinching each of them tight securing them to several tie downs bolted to the floor of the aircraft. With David Bowie singing about his China Girl on the portable radio hanging from the aircraft’s fire extinguisher, the pilot-in-command stepped in through the cabin door, ducking his head, he stood six feet and three inches tall, apologizing for the last minute change in cargo explaining that he hadn’t known until just moments ago.

Jaf again shrugged it off as part of the job. They were going on a resupply mission, bringing much needed supplies to many of the FOBs and OPs dotting the northeastern regions of the country. Apparently commo equipment was much needed.

The first sergeant pulled up in a humvee as the crew briefing concluded. Jaf told Kevin to go over and see what Top needed. He had more cargo for their mission. The crew chief helped the first sergeant to unload six large cardboard boxes, though not as large or nearly as heavy as the green plastic shipping containers, from the back of the humvee, packing them into what little room was left in the cabin of the Chinook. The boxes contained shoes for the Afghani children and they were to drop them at a particular FOB where they would be later distributed to a nearby village.

With the six powerful rotor blades turning fiercely causing a large cloud of dust to be kicked up in the rotor wash, the pilot announced over the ICS that the radar altimeter wasn’t working and that they would have to move to the back-up aircraft. Jaf cursed. There was no way he was humping all that gottdamned cargo to another aircraft. He squeezed into the cockpit with a screwdriver in hand and deftly removed the altimeter from the pilot’s instrument panel, quickly discovering the cannon plug at the rear of the instrument to be loose. He tightened and replaced it. They took off for their mission exactly on time. Sgt Hook out.


Posted by Hook @ 1225 zulu | | Permalink
This post is filed under: The Stan


Welcome to Castle Argghhh! The Home Of One Of Jonah's Military Guys. linked with Army Transformation


8 Comments »
  1. Yeah - more shoes more shoes. Good to hear that.

    BTW - that Jafe needs his own book. Jack Ryan’s got nothin’ on him!!

    Comment by Tammi — 22 July 2004 @ 1237


  2. Army Transformation
    If you look at the era of limited warfare since World War II, this continuum of American involvement in limited liability wars from Korea to Iraqi Freedom, you’ll notice that 81 percent, or four out of five, servicemen and…

    Trackback by Welcome to Castle Argghhh! The Home Of One Of Jonah's Military Guys. — 22 July 2004 @ 1411


  3. Yay! Another JAF story! :-) Yes, JAF needs his own book!

    Comment by Robin in Ohio — 22 July 2004 @ 1516


  4. You are a great writer glad I stumbled upon your blog.

    Comment by Jenn — 22 July 2004 @ 2114


  5. Hook, you are a kind and generous man. This story touched me, I hope you get your rewards… someday…

    Comment by Flarkey — 22 July 2004 @ 2257


  6. Jaf is in dire need of whatever passes for beer in the ’stan!

    Great writing Hook…can’t wait for the hardback.

    Comment by Wayne Fielder — 23 July 2004 @ 0114


  7. I know I’ll get my autographed copy one day Jim, there is no doubt you have the makings of a book or actually I need to rephrase this you are a first class author. Please take it to the next level. Thanks for another good read.

    Comment by Sweet N Sassy — 23 July 2004 @ 0134


  8. Don’t forget. WE want pictures of smiling kids + shoes!!

    Comment by Cindy — 23 July 2004 @ 0149


RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment




Pin Ups for Vets



Proud Sponsors




Orderly Room


Baghdad

About Hook
Contact Hook



Obligatory Disclaimer


This site is a collection of my writings, thoughts, and ramblings and in no way reflects the official positions of the United States Army or the Department of Defense. OPSEC trumps everything.


Current Ops



Hook Publishing


Jackie O'Shea
Jaffy Chronicles
No Tears in Heaven


Hook Productions


I Dreamed It
The Soldier's Silent Night
Here Comes The Sun
You Raise Me Up
One of Those Great Stories
American Soldier
Would You Know My Name


Rules Of Engagement


Copyright © 2003 - 2008. All original content is copyrighted by Sgt Hook. Limited use of said material is authorized given proper attribution provided. Plagiarism is considered a serious breach around these parts and violators will face a firing squad. Any comments left or emails sent become the property of Sgt Hook and are subject to publishing herein. Writing "Confidential" in the subject line of your email will preclude publication of said email.


Proud Sponsors


Visit these Advertisers

♦ Veterans - Use your VA Benefits to Refinance your home loan with VA Loan Refinancing from VLC.


♦ Allured by a cheap car insurance and other cheap deals. Many tend to overspend on their credit card. This leads them to loans and eventually a debt. If you are planning to work at home, you will have to be careful about all this and more.


Sound Off


Cup and Flower


Fall In


ARMY
COAST GUARD
MARINE CORPS
NAVY
AIR FORCE


NOTAM


In view of a recent tendency to identify characters in fiction with real people, it seems proper to state that there are no real people in this volume: both the characters and their names are ficticious. The names or designations of any military units are ficticious. There are no living people nor existing military units presented in this book. -Ernest Hemingway


Band of Brothers



Prev | List | Random | Next
Join
Powered by RingSurf!

Recent Dispatches


Update
Soldiers’ Angel
Humble Apologies
The Underwater Cable Guy
Tales from the Sandbox
Second only to Combat
Operation Browning
Remember Fallujah?
It Is Safe Here
Cleaning House and Digging In
Mourning Heroes
Terror at Wali Dar
Caption This
Get the Story Told
Giant Inspiration


Rank and File



My Ecosystem Details



View My Milblogging.com Profile


Ongoing Ops





Fiddler's Green


Halfway down the road to hell,
In a shady meadow green,
Are the souls of all dead troopers camped
Near a good old-time canteen.
And this eternal resting place
Is known as Fiddler's Green.
-Author Unknown


The Blog of War


"Grab it before the Pentagon orders it burned..." - Vanity Fair

"...nonpartisan patriotism is the common thread tying together these reflections, love letters and stories of combat. They make for riveting reading." - The Washington Post

Winner of the 2006 Gold Medal for Anthologies - Military Writer's Society of America

"This collection is an excellent introduction to an emerging form of war reporting." - Booklist


Annals

May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004
September 2004
August 2004
July 2004
June 2004
February 2004
July 2003
June 2003
May 2003
April 2003
March 2003


Giving Credit

Powered by:
WordPress v. 2.3
Blog Design:
E.Webscapes
Hosted by:
Blogs About Hosting

Other

login
register


Meta

RSS
Comments RSS
WP


0.282 || Powered by WordPress