It was December 1968 and I had just arrived at my new duty station, Eielson
AFB, Alaska. What a difference! From the steaming jungles of Vietnam to the
frozen snow covered tundra of "The Last Frontier," our 49th state.
In
Vietnam I had been flying the Bell "Huey," which was (at the time) a
state-of-the-art jet powered helicopter. In Alaska my unit would be operating
the 1951 era H-21 "Flying Banana" powered by a reciprocating R-1820
engine, a design introduced in pre-World War II bomber production.
Our mission
in Alaska took us back and forth, for the most part, on an east-west route
between Fairbanks and the western coastline, at Norton Sound. Much of the flight
itinerary was along the Yukon River, Alaska's original interior lifeline. I met
a lot of interesting people: Indians, Eskimos, prospectors, missionaries,
hunters, bush pilots, state troopers, and people who just wanted to be in the
wilds to "get away from it all", whatever "it" was.
During
my first trip to Galena AFB, a remote outpost on the Yukon, I flew with another
squadron pilot, to learn the ropes. We were up at a thousand feet with a good
view in every direction. As we approached Nenana, where the Alaska Railroad
(from Anchorage) crosses a large river, the other pilot said, "That's
Nenana, our first good checkpoint." I noticed Nenana rhymed with banana.
After a few miles the river town of Tanana came into view. To show I knew where
we were via my map reading I pointed it out and named it, rhyming the name with
banana as "Tah-nanna." A goof on my part. Tanana rhymes with "ban-a-claw" as
"Tan-a-naw".
A week later I found myself on the
route to Galena again, but myself, with a flight mechanic as a passenger in the
co-pilot's seat. This time I was down at just 300 feet or so, maybe less. A lot
of military helicopter flying is "legalized buzzing." Sometimes I get
very sleepy flying so I drop down on the deck. In that situation you are flying
the ship every moment and you don't ever nod off to sleep.
My recent experience
in combat had taught me to closely observe everything on the ground, looking for
anything unusual and/or out of place, particularly when out in the
"boonies" or rural areas. We were passing over a zone with a light
covering of trees, clumps of them here and there, and a few small ponds. There
strung through the trees --- WIRE! The infamous "comm wire"
"Charlie" strung along the Ho Chi Minh Trail as his favorite mode of
communication via his field telephone system.
NVA or Viet Cong out here in the
desolate Alaska interior? Who else in this day and age of microwave, satellite
and single sideband radio would be stringing comm wire in the trees?
I didn't
figure it out at the time but later was told the answer to the puzzle. The wire,
in pieces here and there, was left over from a project of sixty years earlier,
the U.S. Army's Alaska telegraph. Things truly are "frozen in time" in
Alaska.