
Capt. Patrick Durbin
(standing), administrative officer for the Ohio National Guard's
137th Aviation Regiment, takes part during a Sept. 7 ceremony at
the Columbus-based Army Aviation Flight Facility to say goodbye
to the last two UH-1H Iroquois 'Huey' helicopters. The Hueys
have been part of the Ohio National Guard for the last 35 years.
Photo by Staff Sgt. Kim Snow, adjutant general's dept.

An aviator with the
Ohio National Guard's Company B, 1st Battalion, 137th Aviation
Regiment, prepares a UH-1H Iroquois 'Huey' helicopter for its
final flight during a Sept. 7 ceremony at the Columbus-based
Army Aviation Flight Facility. The ceremony said goodbye to the
last two Huey helicopters the Ohio National Guard has. The Hueys
have been part of the Ohio National Guard for the last 35 years.
Photo by Staff Sgt. Kim Snow, adjutant general's dept.

A UH-1H Iroquois 'Huey'
helicopter takes its final flight during a Sept. 7 ceremony at
the Columbus-based Army Aviation Flight Facility. The ceremony
said goodbye to the last two Huey helicopters the Ohio National
Guard has. The Hueys have been part of the Ohio National Guard
for the last 35 years. Photo by Staff Sgt. Kim Snow, adjutant
general's dept. |
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Story by Sgt. Benjamin Cossel,
196 MPAD
CAMP GRAYLING, Mich. - As you go about your daily routine during
annual training this year and the familiar "womp-womp-womp"
sounds of helicopters fill the air, stop for a moment and turn
your head toward the sky. Scattered amongst the Blackhawks,
Chinooks and Kiowas buzzing about you'll notice two UH-1H
Iroquois reliably doing what they've done for more than 35
years.
Hollywood's infatuation with the Iroquois, known in common
vernacular as the Huey, and exemplified in such movies as
"Apocalypse Now" and "We Were Soldiers," has planted the image
of the Huey as firmly in the American psyche as the tank and the
M-16 machine gun.
As the sun sets on AT 2007, so too, will that iconic image of
Army aviation take its final ride for the Ohio Army National
Guard.
"The Huey is what's called legacy technology," said Col. Rick
Hall, the state Army aviation officer for Ohio.
"It doesn't have redundant systems, it doesn't have near the
lift capability of the modern aircraft, it doesn't have enough
range and it doesn't do as well in a crash as modern aircraft,"
Hall said.
Hall explained that the Army has been in the process of phasing
out the Huey for several years but that Ohio resisted releasing
their Hueys for as long as possible.
"The state doesn't have enough Blackhawks, so frankly, we've
used the Hueys to fill out our fleet."
Hall estimates that at their peak, the Hueys numbered about 120
in service, now only two fly with Company B, 1st Battalion,
137th Aviation Regiment.
"It'll be a sad, sad day when these birds finally go away," said
Columbus, Ohio resident Sgt. 1st Class Robert Baker, a Huey
mechanic with Company B.
With 33 years in the military, all in the aviation field, Baker
has worked on nearly every aircraft fielded since his days as a
private.
"The Huey is dependable and fun - you just don't have to worry
about it, it's a mechanically sound aircraft," Baker said.
Besides being reliable, he said there was no other aircraft he
preferred flying more.
"You could just throw open the doors and see the whole world,"
Baker said.
That sentiment apparently filled others as people constantly
stopped Baker to ask for rides in the Huey.
"We've taken so many people up in this aircraft. VIP's,
governors, even General Kambic [Brig. Gen. Matthew Kambic,
Ohio's assistant adjutant general for Army] loved it. So many
people have gone up in the Huey and they all just love it."
With the end of his flying days in the Hueys looming near, chief
warrant officer Brian Michael, a pilot with Company B maintains
a pragmatic attitude.
"I'll be a little sad to see them go, but they've served their
purpose. Time to move on to bigger, better and faster aircraft,"
Michael said.
After having flown Huey missions in the jungles of Vietnam,
Michael seems the perfect choice to fly these aircraft in their
final days. During annual training the Huey has been used for
Bambi bucket operations, range sweep and medevac missions, but
Michael remembers well when the Huey was the king of the air
during the Vietnam War.
"The Huey was the perfect aircraft for the mission in Vietnam,"
said the Columbus, Ohio based Michael.
Michael stops to consider all the different missions he's flown
in the Huey; rescue operations during the blizzard of 1978 in
northern Ohio, casualty evacuation and resupply operations
during mudslides in north-central Ohio in 1989.
"Those state operations, the ones where we were actually helping
people, saving lives, those were some of the best," Michael
said.
Heading out to the flight line, pilot and crew chiefs alike
prepared the Huey for one in the a list of missions. Near the
second week of August, the two remaining Hueys will be released
from the Ohio Army National Guard, transferred to their new
homes.
One of the Hueys will go to the Colorado National Guard to
continue service, the other will go to Texas where it will be
refurbished for foreign sales.
"I'd keep those Hueys for another two years if I could," said
Hall. "It'll definitely be a sad day when we finally let them
go."
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