Aviation's Wings of Hope. An Aviation Blog by Owen Zupp.

Owen Zupp - Friday, January 06, 2012

Every day there seems to be a reminder of the devastating power of Mother Nature. Her brute force is varied and does not discriminate, with the potential to level cities and bring nations to their knees. Yet amidst these tragedies we are also reminded of how the world can come together as one in a way that seems to defy every other global circumstance. Physical and fiscal aid brushes away borders and humanity is able to be recognised for its redeeming qualities rather than its recklessness.

When natural disasters strike and in all forms of aid and rescue, aviation has a key role to play. The machine that owes much of its whirlwind evolution to times of war is now the primary means of rapid response for those in trouble. Whether the situation is an international crisis or a lone stranded hiker in an inaccessible canyon, aircraft can provide assistance in a manner and time frame that can only come from the skies.

The first recorded air-sea rescue dates back to 1911 when a Curtiss seaplane undertook a rescue sortie on Lake Michigan in the United States. In 1917, Australian Frank McNamara won the Victoria Cross when he landed his Martynside bomber under fire to rescue a downed fellow pilot after a raid near Gaza. And so, the seeds of airborne rescue were sown, growing in complexity at a rate corresponding to the development of the machines. Aircraft as simple as Tiger Moths had their aft fuselage modified to accommodate a stretcher and patient while the Douglas C-47, became a stalwart of allied medical evacuations in World War 2. Yet perhaps the most significant development saw the advent of the helicopter. Its ability to hover above and extract patients from a small clearing or disabled vessel rather than a prepared runway immediately ear-marked the helicopter as a key player in the rescue field. From the close of World War Two to the present day, helicopters have been at the forefront of this vital role.

It was also in war that the logistics of moving men, supplies and machines grew to a grand scale. Legends emerged such as the airborne crossing of the Himalayan Mountains, or ‘Flying the Hump’. With seaborne routes blocked, China was supplied from the air to enable it to continue its war with the Japanese. From 1942 and in the face of towering terrain and horrendous weather, over 600 aircraft were ultimately lost flying this dangerous yet critical route. In a ‘Cold War’ perspective, the Berlin Airlift bypassed the Soviet blockade of the city from the air to provide the supplies needed to its occupants. Over the 11 month blockade over 200,000 flights were conducted and ultimately resulted in access from the West being afforded to Berlin.

In the current day, the use of aircraft in humane endeavours is highly diversified and far-reaching. The range and speed of modern transport aircraft have indeed shrunk the world in a commercial sense, but this technology also permits the rapid deployment of aid. Tragedies such as Haiti and the Boxing Day Tsunami have resulted in a response from all corners of the globe and not merely the immediate neighbours of the stricken nations. Such is the speed with which assistance can be mobilised that initial response rescue teams can be on-scene within hours to help in the search for survivors. This is then followed by the co-ordinated supply of food, water and shelter on a scale that could not be imagined before the advent of the aeroplane. In such circumstances the only limitations lie in the capacity of the airport.

In the face of fire aircraft now battle hot-spots from the air. Whether it is via a ‘Bambi-Bucket’ tethered beneath a helicopter, a converted Boeing 747 with a 20,000 US Gallon tank or deploying fire-fighters at the front, airborne resources provide a real tactical advantage against bush-fires. Their speed can permit an early response to a small remote outbreak before it escalates, while their precision can dump retardant within metres of battling fire crews and threatened homes. In contrast, when communities are isolated by rising flood waters, helicopters can provide rescue and the vast tailgates of military transports can deploy food for man and stock from above.

Organisations such as Australia’s Royal Flying Doctor Service have been providing aero-medical transport for over ninety years and now such services have almost become an expectation of modern society. Whether retrieving critically ill accident victims or routinely transporting patients from remote communities to the advanced facilities in major centres, air transport provides a timely, comfortable means of transfer for those already suffering.

When oil rigs catch alight or vessels are lost miles from home, relief comes from the air. Air Forces and civil operators boast the range and technology to locate and recover stranded victims despite the weather or the difficulty of the extrication. From large fixed wing electronic surveillance marvels to rotary wing aircraft and the unique skills of their remarkable crews, there are very few situations that the skies cannot provide the most rapid search and effective transfer to safety.

The spectacular performance of the modern fighter is always the drawcard for any air display. Yet at times such as these when the Haitian community is devastated to a level beyond comprehension it is worth recalling the many noble roles that the aircraft has undertaken across the years. The very nature of aviation’s freedom in the three dimensions allows it to access disasters with speed when other means of communication and contact are cut. Task specific helicopters and aeroplanes have even dispensed with the need for a runway in many instances as winches and aerial deployment of loads provide immediate aid. We must also remember those who crew these aircraft. Not just the pilots, but the winch operators, crewmen, doctors, nurses, loadmasters and paramedics. The skill, care and compassion are the factors that transform an inert machine to a life saving resource.

Aviation has brought our world closer together in so many ways. Yet undoubtedly the most worthy pursuit of aviation is in the way that we can help each other and enhance our ability to co-exist. Even in its darkest hours the world can take comfort in the knowledge that at an airfield somewhere there is always a crew at the ready with their wings of hope.

Recent Posts

Tags

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

Archive

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