2 Navy training jets collide over South Texas, injuring 1
Source: Associated Press
41 minutes ago
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) Two Navy training jets collided over South Texas on Monday, forcing the two crew members on one plane to bail out and leaving one of them with minor injuries, the military said.
The two British-built T-45C Goshawk jets collided at around 11 a.m. over Ricardo, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southwest of Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi-based Chief of Naval Air Training tweeted.
One jet with a student and instructor aboard was able to land safely at nearby Naval Air Station Kingsville. The other jet crashed nearby after its student pilot and instructor ejected safely. One of them was treated for minor injuries at a Corpus Christi hospital.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/co-state-wire-texas-sports-37165a5735876c9df5ba3563064f20b8
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)Quote from my USAF combat veteran father.
Flew combat in three wars.
He was a member of the Caterpillar Club. Yours?
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)He had a lot of medals in a drawer that we rarely looked at.
He was humble and also kept classified information classified his entire life. He was strict USAF, everything by the rules.
I knew he flew the Burma Hump during WWII as navigator and tail gunner.
You probably know how dangerous that was. So if he bailed it would have been then.
In Viet Nam he flew cargo and air refuelers in south and north VN.
We were stationed near VN during the war, if his plane had gone down, we would have probably heard via AF grapevine.
In Korea, he would never say what he did. Came back with what we now know is PTSD.
Where did your dad bail?
snort
(2,334 posts)LOL. He was training one of his new guys in an F-106 when it decided it didn't want to fly anymore. But yeah, Dad never talked much about Viet Nam and never about Korea. He was the Chief liaison for the Northern and Southern Cal divisions in '68-'69. If your Dad was there then, then there's a reasonable chance they worked together.
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)Of course that was the real worry during wartime. I was shocked the first time I saw my dad carry a side arm when he was getting ready to fly to VN. He told me it was in case they were shot down and had to shot their way out of trouble. The gun was small and I didn't hold out a lot of hope the plan would work.
But a plane going down any where any time is a big worry as well.
I am glad your Dad was safe. In terms of the F-106 not wanting to fly any more, my Dad always had a lot of respect for the maintenance crews, he said they were the ones who kept the planes up in the air.
We were in Southeast Asia from 1960 to 1964, so that is when Dad was flying combat in VN.
I wonder why our fathers would never talk about Korea. That is odd isn't it?
Nice talking to a fellow brat!
snort
(2,334 posts)I have Dad's .380 he purchased in Korea. The .45 they were issued was to tight a fit for the cockpit of an F86. Born at Tyndall. You?
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)But he had it attached to a belt around his waist, with a holster. Maybe the guns were small so they fit in the cockpits.
He didn't purchase it, it was government issue.
I was born in Northern Wisconsin because my Dad was in Korea at the time, so my mother went to stay with her parents.
Apparently when I was born my dad was getting ready to take off, was on the runway, and one of the ground crew came running out and stopped the plane to tell him that he had a baby daughter. His first child! I like that story. I actually stopped a USAF plane from taking off on time!
Then one brother and sister were born at Castle AFB, and another brother and sister were born at Ft Snelling in MN, a reserve unit my dad was in charge of.
During the VN war we were stationed at Yokota and Naha.
Tyndall is a sweet spot, on the beach.
snort
(2,334 posts)Small World kinda stuff goin' on here. For TDY we lived on Mexico Beach. It was a great time to be a kid.
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)Right we lived on the beach in Okinawa, it was really great.
And in Japan we lived out in the paddies right outside of Tokyo.
I loved everything about Japan. And am partial to everything Asian to this day.
Being an AF brat had pros and cons. Certainly should hardship assignments, and constant moving around.
But great DOD schools, loved the air bases, and loved living in different areas of the US and Asia.
turbinetree
(24,745 posts)and then March, Ellsworth, Wiesbaden, near Tokyo, that's just for starters
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)We were there in the early 60's.
My parents were at March before I was born.
I wish we had gotten to Germany.
turbinetree
(24,745 posts)better than I could speak English, very formative years like 5 years old, my brother was born in Japan.
I can still remember living off base in Germany and going down to the Rhine River and there was a bakery, that made marshmallow Germany chocolate cookie to this day that was and still is the best cookie I have ever had and we lived near a gasthaus in Wiesbaden.
It has been a amazing adventure.....
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)Really wonderful.
We weren't allowed to eat Japanese ice cream because their cows were not tested for TB at the time.
So we would sneak out to the food stands and eat it secretly.
Meiji chocolate is fabulous.
That is so neat you could speak Japanese so well. Good for you.
I visited a friend who lived with her husband on an AF missile silo base in Europe and I could not believe how good the food was all over Europe. Not at all like American food.
Right being a brat is an adventure. People would not believe what our lives were like growing up.
turbinetree
(24,745 posts)in a lot of ways. I had great teachers. I do not remember the ice cream, probably because of what you said about the TB. We had a Japanese house maid and she was earning a living, because it was 6 years after WWII, and she taught me Japanese and we were there during the Korean war, we came back state side in the mid 1950's, her name was Keiko. She passed away in the mid 1990's...
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)Yes I think military kids have a better understanding of the world than kids who never leave their hometown.
Yes we had a maid as well. And yes they were earning a living in what was then a third world country.
We lived out in the paddies as we called it. No room on base. But it was really neat to live off base.
The DOD teachers were excellent and we got a wonderful education from them.
I still love all things Asian to this day. And people have to take their shoes off at the door when entering my home!
turbinetree
(24,745 posts)we also took off our shoes, and we also lived off base....
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)COL Mustard
(5,949 posts)The pilots were looking the wrong way!
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)COL Mustard
(5,949 posts)Look both ways. In Dublin they have signs on the road that say Look Right or Look Left as appropriate. Ive only been killed twice!
Irish_Dem
(47,697 posts)Glad you have been reincarnated back to the US.
TomWilm
(1,832 posts)LeftInTX
(25,719 posts)Amazing: Pilots, passenger uninjured after midair crash
By PATTY NIEBERG May 13, 2021
https://apnews.com/article/denver-3467a976f0cdb3cc64a30417454f944e
pfitz59
(10,409 posts)all it takes is a moments distraction.