Caribous, Cattle and Crossbows. (Part Two) An Aviation Blog by Owen Zupp.

Owen Zupp - Wednesday, January 18, 2012

....The Montagnard, or “Mountain People”, were another ally. Brown remembers them as being a good people; short, tough and “very anti communist”. They possessed small crossbows that were incredibly tightly strung and would fire a 12 inch bamboo arrow. In his room one evening Brown attempted to relieve the boredom by shooting the arrow into the thick solid wood door of his villa apartment. “It went straight through the bloody door! It was incredibly powerful.” Left jutting from the other side, the arrowhead fortunately caused no damage to life or limb. Though not fired again, the crossbow did make the long journey home to Australia.

The RTFV did not have the airspace to itself. An absence of radar and prevalence of cloud meant that aircraft were not always aware of each others presence. “I saw a Canberra dive down in front of us,” he starts, “and then another and another.” Brown describes the looping motion of the bombers using his hands in the best fighter-pilot fashion. “I had flown through the middle of a Canberra bombing raid!” At times, being on the ground wasn’t any safer. “At one of the bigger bases, I think it was NhaTrang,” Brown strains the memory banks, “I was waiting to take off when a South Vietnamese A1 Skyraider landed on its belly tank right in front of me. The whole aeroplane went up in flames.” Miraculously, the pilot, the squadron CO, escaped without a scratch. Faced with an obvious delay and readying to offer assistance, the Aussie crew shutdown their Caribou. As fire tenders whizzed by, the Tower called the ‘Wallaby’ to ‘back out’. Brown hurried to comply, “I had no sooner started it, when the starboard engine went Voomf! There were flames for about 3-4 seconds and then it went out.” The culprit was found to be a cracked component in the fuel system that subsequently sprayed fuel over the hot engine. There was a happy ending though, “Unbelievably, the deHavilland Canada representative to Vietnam was on the base. He stripped and rebuilt the back of the engine overnight and totally rewired it. The aircraft flew out the next day.”

At Vung Tau the Australian Caribous were supported by RAAF ground crews, about whom Brown cannot speak too highly. Unlike the American system of “Crew Chiefs” assigned to a single aircraft and expected to be a ’jack of all trades’, the RTFV was supported by a team of skilled RAAF tradesmen. “An aircraft would come in unserviceable and 10 people would hit it. Bang. The next morning it was on the flightline, ready to go. It was a 24 hour a day job and they worked like drovers’ dogs.” On arriving in Vietnam in 1965, Brown’s tour of duty was originally six months, though this was extended to eight months whilst he was there. In that entire time he can only recall 3 or 4 occasions when a full complement of aircraft was not available.

When describing the suitability of the Caribou to its role, he puts it simply, “100%. It was a lovely aeroplane and very strong.” Warmly describing it as a “truck with wings”, he states that he never had cause to shut down an engine in flight and rarely was an engine change required for anything other than reaching its scheduled ‘life’. Coupled with its amazing short field performance, its sturdy reliability has seen the Caribou serve in numerous theatres of operation since Vietnam. For Brown, his ‘tour’ ended in January of 1966 and he subsequently entered the civil ranks of QANTAS. Now in retirement, he was present at a recent air show when the air, dust and crowd were stirred up by the distinctive growl of the deHavilland Caribou. For those in attendance it was a display of impressive low level manoeuvrability and short field performance. For Barrie Brown it probably evoked memories of the mountains of Vietnam, tight strips, old friends and the occasional flying pig.

Caribous, Cattle and Crossbows. (Part One) An Aviation Blog by Owen Zupp.

Owen Zupp - Tuesday, January 17, 2012

2009 saw the deHavilland Caribous of the Royal Australian Air Force celebrate 45 years of service and ultimately their retirement. In that time they had performed under the most trying of conditions, both at home and abroad. One of its earliest deployments was to Vietnam, where Barrie Brown served as a young Flying Officer. Brown had been diverted in to Vietnam enroute from Canada while delivering the RAAF’s first Caribous. Little did he know that within a year he would be back there on active service.

The RAAF Transport Flight Vietnam (RTFV) was based out of Vung Tau, with its pilots accommodated a jeep ride away on the northern bank of the Mekong River. At an earlier time, the villas that now housed the Aussie pilots had formed part of South Vietnams “French Riviera”. In 1965 the contingent, callsign “Wallaby Flight”, consisted of 6 aeroplanes and 13 pilots supported by RAAF ground crew. Shared with the United States and allied forces, Vung Tau was a hive of activity, with a sea of helicopters and Pilatus Porters doing ‘touch and go’s’ across the runway. Brown recalls, “You could be sixth in line and ‘cleared to land’, or cleared for take off with an aircraft head-on about to land. You’d just take off and break.”  “Even so”, he adds, “I can’t recall any mid-airs in my time there. You just kept your eyes open.”

The operation saw four aircraft operating seven days a week, in what Barrie affectionately terms “Milk Runs”. With one aircraft operating from Da Nang, the other Caribous headed for Saigon, due south and along the east coast respectively. With most sectors in the vicinity of fifteen minutes and around eight sectors per day, the two pilots and Loadmaster became very familiar with their machine and task. Far from crates of dairy products, Brown recalls a litany of cargo, “Passengers, mail, rice, salt, fish, fish oil, grass mats, bodies and coffins.” The vast load often called for crews to take up their stations first, with the load subsequently piled up behind them. “We also carried live cattle that were restrained by tie-down straps around the C of G.” Lacking the house manners of normal passengers, the cattle often responded to natures call requiring the back “to be hosed out post flight”. However, this behaviour was far more bearable than one particular pig’s adventure. Barrie relates, “We carried live pigs in cane baskets. I heard of one that got loose from its basket not long after take off. With the back open, it apparently spotted the light and bolted straight out the back from a height of a few hundred feet!”

Operations were predominantly flown visually, often below a low cloud base that shrouded the surrounding hills. Whilst terrain was an ever present threat, it was obviously not the sole enemy. The Australians were always at risk to ground fire and flew spiraling approaches accordingly. Brown’s aircraft took hits on two occasions. One of these followed the delivery of a 105mm Howitzer. The artillery piece had been broken down into components and, after great effort, loaded into the Caribou. Following delivery into a critical one-way strip, the RAAF crew made ready. “It was situated in a valley, so we used to depart ‘on the deck’. It was coming out of there that we took two hits in the belly.” On the receiving end was a South Vietnamese soldier. His injuries were not fatal and had been lessened to some degree by “deflector boards” that were fitted to the Caribou just beneath his seat.

Knowing little about Vietnam before leaving Australian shores, the Caribou missions took the young pilot into the South Vietnamese heartlands. Surrounded by jutting hills, lush jungle and watercourses, Brown’s strongest memory of his tour of duty is the sheer “beauty of the country”. He recalls the missions as ‘milk runs’ but adds, “There was nothing boring about the flying.”   “Zig-zagging between freighters on approach to the strip at Cam Ranh Bay” must have been exciting, but it was the runway at Ha Tien that was most interesting. Situated on the Mekong Delta, the runway itself had been dug out of a rice paddy. The excavated clay had been dried and ‘cooked’ before being used for foundation. It was then covered with bamboo poles and topped with Pierced Steel Planking (PSP). Around 1000 feet in length and 40 feet wide, it offered only 4 feet of clearance either side of the main landing gear! Crosswind landings were not permitted, though the ‘luxury’ of a small unloading and turning bay did exist at strips end. Brown recalls, “The wheels were always in 6 to 8 inches of water. The take-off technique was to wait for the end to disappear under the nose and then rotate. This occurred at about 55 knots.” This strip claimed Caribou A4-173, the aircraft that Brown had delivered from Canada the preceding year. In May 1965 as it attempted to land at Ha Tien, “173” touched down short of the strip with devastating effect. The starboard gear sheared and the Caribou collapsed on to its wing and prop causing major damage. A replacement wing was subsequently flown in by helicopter and the aircraft repaired in situ. A novel photo opportunity existed when the aircraft was subsequently flown out with one wing bearing the markings of the USAF! Despite the potential for mishap, Brown remembers the challenge of such landing fields as an enjoyable aspect of his time abroad.

Flight into many of these strips was for the purpose of resupplying US camps with rations, medical supplies and ammunition. Speaking of their allies, Brown states, “Relations with the Americans was generally good, especially with the guys in the field. A typical camp had 2 or 3 ‘Yanks’ and 100 South Vietnamese or Montagnard troops.” The Americans would always offer the Aussies lunch and the latter were only too happy to oblige. Curiously, another aspect to the relationship hinged around the return of empty bottles for cash deposits. “We used to return their ‘empties’. Their own blokes didn’t seem to care, but it was no problem for us to throw the bottles in and take them back. As a consequence, we were extremely well received.”.........

Don't forget to check back for the conclusion of "Caribous, Cattle and Crossbows."

Title Image: Barrie Brown. (c)

 

Recent Posts

Tags

Heathrow Boeing 747-400 warbirds thunderstorm, weather radar Sydney second airport Highlander airplane Down to Earth skies Kenneth McGlashan Downham Market pilot traininf PCDU Kitplane outback airbus kitplanes plane crash Nancy Bird Walton Facebook sport Concorde 723 squadron aviaton Geoffrey DeHavilland learn to fly Australian Aviation magazine Neil Armstrong US Airways Flight 1549 canyoner Vietnam aviation jobs war Hornet International Cricket Hall of Fame Titanic sinking low pass ditching an airplane Fate is the Hunter motivational Airliner design WW2 warbird FA-18 Hornet Boeing 787 glass cockpit QANTAS A380 storm cells best aviation blog sky air crash investigations airliner development Yak 52 Flying Fortress 737-300 pilot blog England fling Challenger NASA flight blog aviation consultant found flying kangaroo Rolls Royce Merlin cricket speaking engagements keynote speaker jabiru pilot QANTAS half yearly report September 11th Terwilliger Productions hang gliding USAF aviation writer Flight 6231 V1 The Red Barn X-planes Killed in Action Tuskegee Airmen Glenn McGrath p Owen Zupp Grant McHerron Boeing SST Duxford Bradman Foundation 2011 Defence Force Recruiting wings night Bundaberg open day P-51 airplane Sir Donald Bradman September 11 Boeing Everett fatal stall Yak Formation Hillary Clinton airport under threat Southern Cross QANTAS flight instructor flight deck landing an aeroplane North American Harvard Red Bull EFIS bombing of Darwin 0/11 green technology tailwheel aeroplane aviaton blog Nancy Bird HGS stick and rudder ditching an aircraft 38 Squadron RAAF open cockpit Bell 429 Air Ambulance Cessna Airbus A320 Royal Flying Doctor Space Shuttle dogfight Commercial pilot licence buying an airplane SCAT raked wing-tip manuscript Amy Johnson New Zealand: QANTAS Glass revolution speak QANTAS Airbus A380 737 take off A1 Skyraider air australia flying schoold John Fisher: airplane Bulldog Pitts Red Baron X-15 there and back Amelia Earhart Douglas DC-3 Vandenberg log book Spruce Goose QANTAS QF32 Owen Zupp, fly at short field Canberra army Hawker Hurricane the Fatal Stall Milford Sound coaxial aviator STOL Super Jumbo learning to fly pilot jobs L19 Crash helicopter Kingsford Smith 737NG Steve Waugh Foundation night bombing careers in aviation aeroplane blog Hong Kong Trader plane crash Caboolture Australian War Memorial RAAF Blue Angels aviation image aviation photography Electronic Flight Bag A320 flying training 737 classic EADI Shuttleworth Collection pilot academy Singapore simpler time aviation author Queenstown New Zealand Beech King Air Airbus A330 Boeing Wallaby Airlines the pilot Air France 447 box-kites pilot licence trans-Pacific GPS Karlene Pettit Boeing 747-8F Chuck Yeager Tiger Moth Boeing Stearman Ansett Australia ANZAC Day 2012 DH Comet Flying Doctor most popular aviation blog Kenneth Butterworth McGlashan Bradman Tiger Moth crash Plane Crazy Down Under navigation training QANTAS engineers how to fly an airliner masters of aviation management 2012 Special Casualty Access Team CAC Boomerang popular aviation blog P.G. Taylor wings ambulance bowral CAC Wirraway tighar Wright Brothers Wallaby Flight Coffee Royal Affair biplae P-40 Kittyhawk choosing a flying school QANTAS A380: Nancy Bird airline collapse UAV dreams air force de Havilland Lord of the Rings Pathfinder Charles Ulm Arthur Morris hang glider security owen zupp single-engined Fokker jet upset Super Hornet Steve Visscher Lawrence Hargrave New Zealand aviation careers ICAO F2G Corsair flight school EFB 400 National Press Club Trans-Tasman Practical Pilot RTFV coaxe boeing 737 Boeing 737NG CRT Strategic Airlines Costa Concordia Ponting Foundation flight simulator MXS contra-rotating propeller Phar Lap deCrespigny Sydney Harbour Air Force One 9/11 antique Vietnam War low flying G-force Bomber Command terrorism memory aerobatics QANTAS announcement Victorian Air Ambulance interview BAE Hawk McGrath Foundation RFC sailor Piper aero club airshow Stearman stalling poppies pilot air Garmin G1000 www.owenzupp.com aviaton author aerospace currency value Kirabati DH82 Battle of Britain Canberra Bomber in-flight diversion Garmin soldier take-off pre-flight briefing ATFV preflight briefing QANTAS pilot five tips Boeing 747 blog flight instruction Uluru student pilot first solo arospace Blackhawk ditching Ice Pilots J230D Around Australia flight Avalon Air Show flying careers forced lending administration Sleepless in Seattle coastal flying Bill Hitchcock safer flying Gallipoli caribou Harvard VH-OQA Chris Sperou Flight for Control cost of flying Mrigs field bachelor of aviation ditching an aeroplane ATIS top tips Beechcraft Paramedic GFC buying an aeroplane Pitts US Navy Mittagong Airfield D-Day flying jobs FMC Turkish Airways 1951 writing a aviation aircraft QNH Keith Anderson Ricky Ponting RMS Titanic WW1 Nancy Bird Walton: Jabiru Aircraft Sydney Airport going solo Distinguished Flying Cross RAA Pump Up the Angels Chino Super King Air cumulonimbus aviators World War Two pilot training ditching an airplae Sullenberger NSW Ambulance Service 1942 EFATO Impossible Airport Howland Island Queenstown Australia flight aviation consulatant Pathfinders Dawn Service aviation airline ANZAC Cove principles of flight Temora Ernest Gann Jeppesen stalling an aeroplane solar Seattle Royal Australian Navy Cathay Pacific One Six Right Boeing Field most poular aviation blog Charles Kingsford Smith Airbus A380 baggy green Fleet Air Arm Scouts weather radar RNP search early flight Steve Waugh Spitfire DH Mosquito K.I.A Se5a ballooning CO2 emissions Matt Hall Montagnard QF32 forced landing Bert Hinkler flying school firts solo Bush Pilot Wagga Wagga Mick Wilson airport security B-17 Rotate P-51 Mustang aircraft accident speaking Jatstar Airbus aviation speaker 737-400 CA18 Mustang future luskintyre C-47 Apollo 1 Stanwell Park Canberra Airport flying blog Flying Podcast HUD Red Tails contrail DC-3 speaker tail rotor flying memorial biofuel Ayers Rock Yak 18T jet upset recovery fly at Avro Lancaster Cessna Caravan airliner crash airfiald under threat The Museum of Flight Lindbergh building your own aeroplane search for Amelia Earhart biplane airliner buting an aeroplane pressurisation Cape Canaveral Jetstar Australian Army Gen-X engines Nancy Bird-Bird Walton 16R FA-18 de Crespigny addresses aviation degree ANZAC Smithy aviation blog commercial pilot license engine failure QF94 Otto Lilienthal ghost Great Depression J170 Cb joy of flight airlines Boeing 747-8i rescue the bombing of Darwin Temora Aviation Museum pilot careers 747-8F formation flying Pacific Ocean airplane blog QANTAS pilots pilot license Puffin severe turbulence Mach number FA18 stalling an airplane Hinkler 21st Century flying career aviation pioneer RAF DFC Vung Tau Bell 429 helicopter NTSB QANTAS Formula One Grand Prix metal detectors Apollo 13 Lest We Forget Steve Cooke Northwest Orient aviation journalist PFL solo Boeing 737-800 Cathay Pacific Cargo airmanship thunderstorm flight training Ansett sacrifice Dunlirk airman

Archive

© Owen Zupp. All rights Reserved.                                             Admin . Privacy . Disclaimer                                            Website by Shot to Pieces . Powered by Blackroom