Hat's off to the...Coast Guard - Sinking/Rescue s/v Faule Haut

Boathavn

Hof & Gammel Dansk - Skål !
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NEWS | May 26, 2022

New York Air Guard conducts mid-ocean medical supply drop


By Staff Sgt. Daniel Farrell and Maj. Michael O’Hagan, New York National Guard



F.S. GABRESKI AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, N.Y. – New York Air National Guard’s 106th Rescue Wing flew 1,200 miles east over the North Atlantic May 20, found a 32-foot sailboat heading toward the Azores, and dropped vital medical supplies to the three-person crew.

“I can’t find my sprinkler heads in the summertime till I turn on the system. So, the fact that we could fly out there, 1,200 miles, it’s a needle in a haystack,” said Master Sgt. Joe Sexton, a loadmaster for the mission.

Adding to the challenge: The Colombian crew of the French-registered yacht “Namah” spoke only Spanish, there was no locator beacon on the boat, and the boat’s position was 12 hours old, said Lt. Col. Sean Garell, the commander of the HC-130J aircraft.

But three hours after the crew left Gabreski Air National Guard Base in Westhampton Beach, near the eastern tip of Long Island, they found the Namah, dropped two packages of medical supplies and turned for home.

The 106th got the mission when a 23-year-old Colombian woman crewing the sailboat scalded herself with boiling water May 19, suffering second- and third-degree burns. The boat was traveling from Panama to St.-Jean-de-Luz, France.

The U.S. Coast Guard received the call and, because they did not have an aircraft available, referred it to the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center at Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida. The center turned to the 106th Rescue Wing.

“Although we are primarily concerned with conducting our rescue mission overseas … we have the ability to do it … for domestic operations, or in this case here, in the Atlantic Ocean,” said Col. Shawn P. Fitzgerald, the commander of the 106th.

The mission was to put together the required medical supplies, locate the Namah and drop the package into the ocean where the crew could retrieve it.

Position updates were sent from the boat to the Coast Guard via a handheld device, relayed to the wing, and then to the aircraft.

Once they found the boat, the Airmen also had to communicate with the crew.

With no Spanish speakers on the aircrew, Garell reached out across the unit and tapped Senior Airman Jocelyn Tapia-Puma, an aviation resource manager.

Tapia-Puma, a Colombian-American, speaks Spanish fluently and volunteered to be the interpreter on the flight.

“I never thought in my career I would be part of a rescue mission,” said Tapia-Puma. “At any given time, anybody, any career field, can be put on a rescue mission, and I was ready to go.”

The wing’s 102nd Rescue Squadron, commanded by Garell, flies the HC-130J Combat King II search and rescue aircraft and was responsible for the mission.

The pararescuemen of the wing’s 103rd Rescue Squadron put the required supplies and treatment directions in two sealed ammunition cases.

The 102nd loadmasters prepared the supplies for the drop.

The waterproof packages were attached to a life preserver unit, said Chief Master Sgt. Craig Connor, the senior loadmaster on the mission.

The loadmasters attached beacons and small parachutes to the bundles so the boaters could locate the 20-lb. packages in case of poor visibility.

Three hours into the flight, the plane descended, and everybody on board started looking for the Namah.

Sexton wrote the numbers 3 and 9 on the windows so everyone could reference any Namah sighting according to a clock position, with the nose of the aircraft being 12.

One of the pilots, Capt. William Hall, found a photo of the boat on a social media site to help visually identify the vessel.

Lt. Col. Kevin Lawhon, the combat systems operator, spotted the boat first on his radar scope. Two minutes later, the Namah came into view.

While copilot Capt. Nicholas Napolitano flew the plane, he was guided by Sexton in the back, who had to get the drop on target.

“It’s like throwing a football through a tire. … If you just go out and try to do it, you’re not going to be very good at it. But if you go in the backyard and constantly practice, you’re going to get pretty good,” Connor said.

Sexton laid belly down on the floor of the aircraft and stuck his head out the side door to provide course-correction inputs to the pilot.

“It was a calm sea state. I knew the drop was going to go good as soon as I saw the way it looked,“ Sexton said.

At the same time, Tapia-Puma was on the radio with the boat’s crew, talking them through the procedure.

From 300 feet, the Airmen could see the crew waving below.

“Load clear,” was broadcast over the radio as Connor released the first package.

He dropped the bundles a little away from the sailboat to avoid any potential damage to the boat.

“Great drop loads,” came over the headset from the pilots after the first drop.

Tapia-Puma took to the radio again, telling the sailboat crew to wait for the second drop before paddling out to pick up the medical package in a small boat.

They didn’t want to hit anybody below.

As the HC-130J made the second pass at 300 feet, Sexton signaled loadmaster Master Sgt. Michael Torre to release the second bundle.

The feeling was triumphant in the cabin, with fist bumps all around, as the bundle hit the water.

Master Sgt. Michael Cruz and Airman 1st Class Bryan Valverde, the maintenance crew chiefs on board, watched one of the Namah crew paddle out to recover the supplies.

Tapia-Puma said she was happy to contribute to the mission’s success.

The fact that she speaks Spanish, with the same Colombian dialect as the injured woman, made a difference, Tapia-Puma said.

“I think she began to cry because she was able to get someone who understood her, and she knew that we were there to help,” said Tapia-Puma. “I think it alleviated a lot of stress … and also being a woman, I think it was very meaningful.”

Communicating with the crew directly gave them hope, Garell said.

“Something we learned in survival school is you can go three weeks without food, three days without water, three hours without shelter,” Garell said. “For humans, you can go three seconds without hope. Airman Tapia-Puma was able to provide that hope.”
 

Boathavn

Hof & Gammel Dansk - Skål !
"Water shot in the boat from every open or broken window and through the companion way whose door and sliding door were crashed and gone. But at the same time she went around, 360° to the left. We capsized right through. A full turn. The rotation was extremely fast, probably took less than three seconds. I flew against the ceiling and back onto my bunk. And then the entire contents of what I had stowed under the bunk fell on me. The three batteries (3×65 kg) were torn out of place and their fixings and two of them were on the floor in front of my bunk."
Lucky no one was hurt in the roll over.
 
F.S. GABRESKI AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, N.Y. – New York Air National Guard’s 106th Rescue Wing flew 1,200 miles east over the North Atlantic May 20, found a 32-foot sailboat heading toward the Azores, and dropped vital medical supplies to the three-person crew.



Adding to the challenge: The Colombian crew of the French-registered yacht “Namah” spoke only Spanish, there was no locator beacon on the boat, and the boat’s position was 12 hours old, said Lt. Col. Sean Garell, the commander of the HC-130J aircraft.

But three hours after the crew left Gabreski Air National Guard Base in Westhampton Beach, near the eastern tip of Long Island, they found the Namah, dropped two packages of medical supplies and turned for home.

The 106th got the mission when a 23-year-old Colombian woman crewing the sailboat scalded herself with boiling water May 19, suffering second- and third-degree burns. The boat was traveling from Panama to St.-Jean-de-Luz, France.
I commend the Air National Guard and the crew who accomplished this but when is it the USA job to fly 1200 miles out into the atlantic and drop supplies to a boat that seems to have no connections to the USA. I feel for the women who burned herself but that is hell of a bill for the taxpayers of the USA.
 

Bump-n-Grind

Get off my lawn.
15,355
4,227
Chesapeake Bay/Vail
I commend the Air National Guard and the crew who accomplished this but when is it the USA job to fly 1200 miles out into the atlantic and drop supplies to a boat that seems to have no connections to the USA. I feel for the women who burned herself but that is hell of a bill for the taxpayers of the USA.
lighten up francis, it's also a damn good training run for the crews involved, and actually serves a purpose
 
lighten up francis, it's also a damn good training run for the crews involved, and actually serves a purpose
Maybe. Guess you are the expert. But for somebody who who pays a hell of a lot of taxes ot the US Gov, I would rather they spend their money on helping and educating citizens of our country. Everybody is entitled to their opinion, yours is duly noted.
 

nolatom

Super Anarchist
3,777
792
New Orleans
Sad to lose your boat, they're living things to us sailors.

Kudos to the tanker AEGEAN HARMONY-- the merchant ships who divert to help foundering sailboats are the mostly-unsung heroes. They break passage to go to any distressed vessel, without complaint. Unlike the other (wonderful) responders, they aren't in the SAR "business", but they have most all subscribed to AMVER or, and the RCC controllers can see where they are, and vector them to the spot, and in midocean they're invariably the first on-scene, and whether they rescue or just stand by, they're a great comfort to those sailors.
 

Elegua

Generalissimo
I commend the Air National Guard and the crew who accomplished this but when is it the USA job to fly 1200 miles out into the atlantic and drop supplies to a boat that seems to have no connections to the USA. I feel for the women who burned herself but that is hell of a bill for the taxpayers of the USA.
I see it as money well spent on many levels.
 

alctel

Member
467
143
Victoria
Sure there is 1000s of years of maritime tradition, the entire concept of GMDSS as well as basic human decency, but on the other hand have you considered the fraction of a fraction of a cent that it'd cost Robalex117's tax dollars?

Lets start restricting the GFS to Americans Only as well while we are at it :rolleyes:.
 
I commend the Air National Guard and the crew who accomplished this but when is it the USA job to fly 1200 miles out into the atlantic and drop supplies to a boat that seems to have no connections to the USA. I feel for the women who burned herself but that is hell of a bill for the taxpayers of the USA.
When the US signed up to the IMS SAR protocols, which means that US boats where ever they are in the world will get help. Every country has agreed areas of responsibilities where they take the lead on rescues for any boat in their area. The US region extends about half way across the Atlantic. I'm guessing the boat was in the US area, otherwise Canada or Portugal would have been tasked. If you want to see some small countries taking responsibility for helping over a big area, take a look at the area NZ covers in the southern hemisphere.

I should add that the US, like many other major maritime countries will help smaller countries in their regions when they have appropriate assets there. As has been said above - it doesn't really matter which country you are from if you get in trouble at sea - whoever can will help. Which in my opinion is how it should be and a credit to basic human decency.


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Boathavn

Hof & Gammel Dansk - Skål !
When the US signed up to the IMS SAR protocols, which means that US boats where ever they are in the world will get help. Every country has agreed areas of responsibilities where they take the lead on rescues for any boat in their area. The US region extends about half way across the Atlantic. I'm guessing the boat was in the US area, otherwise Canada or Portugal would have been tasked. If you want to see some small countries taking responsibility for helping over a big area, take a look at the area NZ covers in the southern hemisphere.

I should add that the US, like many other major maritime countries will help smaller countries in their regions when they have appropriate assets there. As has been said above - it doesn't really matter which country you are from if you get in trouble at sea - whoever can will help. Which in my opinion is how it should be and a credit to basic human decency.

Well said.

And I can only agree, "...which in my opinion is how it should be and a credit to basic human decency..."
 
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