War Stories 12
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Fergs and Beans
By Baby huey
	October 1970 was a month for a change in South Vietnam, with rainfall 
	declining, especially towards the end of the month as the region moved 
	toward its dry, sizzling summer months. Back home, the cover of Life 
	magazine touted articles about Agnew on the Warpath and cassette recorders. 
	By the end of the month, 374 US soldiers would lose their lives.
	For the Medevac crew of the 15th Medical Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division 
	stationed with the clearing station (aid station with a physician) at Fire 
	Support Base (FSB) Mace, thirty-six miles east of the big Bein Hoa airbase 
	and a short twenty-eight miles inland from the East Sea, the day started 
	with an overcast sky. The focus for this week was seeing if Ron Huether, 
	known as Baby Huey with callsign Medevac 2, was ready to become an Aircraft 
	Commander. If he could successfully conduct helicopter ambulance missions 
	while doing most of the decision-making, his status would change from Pilot 
	to Aircraft Commander. The pilot responsible for this week-long evaluation 
	was Hank Tuel, known to all as Little Okie with the callsign Medevac 1. Okie 
	was a much-decorated Medevac pilot and always had a tobacco chew in his 
	mouth and an empty Coke can for the brown slimy spit. These two pilots had 
	flown together many times, making up a One-Two-Punch. Little Okie was within 
	a week of going back to the States and harbored thoughts that Baby Huey 
	would pass this checkride come hell or high water. Baby Huey passing his 
	checkride would allow Okie to leave the unit without a shortage of 
	combat-ready aircraft commanders.
	
	
The 
	crew on the aircraft named Super Kong was Jim Ferguson (Fergie), the 
	crewchief, Dan Brady, the flight medic, and Don Tegethoff (Tiny T), the 
	right-side M-60 machine gunner. The GIBs (Guys in the Back) often worked 
	together and functioned as a formidable life-saving crew. Fergie was the 
	best helicopter crewchief in the unit and revered for his knowledge and 
	standards. Brady was a consummate soldier lifesaver that could stick an IV 
	needle in a bleeding-out patient as the helicopter hammered up and down at 
	maximum speed without even breaking a sweat. Enemy shooting at their Medevac 
	didn't know it, but Tiny T could shoot a cigarette out of their hand at nine 
	hundred feet. When he had you in his sight, you had nowhere to run.
	October 16, 1970, was just another day for this crew. Nothing happened in 
	the morning other than Baby Huey performing a preflight inspection of the 
	aircraft. Fergie did his regular daily inspection and took a fresh fuel 
	sample. At the same time, Brady and Tiny T made sure they had everything 
	ready for the inevitable first mission of the day. They knew a mission would 
	come in because Medevac standby at FSB Mace was beginning to gain a 
	reputation as the most dangerous field standby.
	Sure enough, a call came in for some priority patients due to a 1st Cav 
	Div. unit springing an ambush on enemy soldiers. There was one US casualty 
	and one Viet Cong (VC) casualty resulting in one of the little-known 
	missions of US medical soldiers – that of them tending to any patient on any 
	side of the conflict. By Geneva Conventions, medical service members are 
	neutral in any hostile conflict. There was no distinction about what side 
	the injured soldier was on because the mantra for Medevac was, "So That 
	Others May Live."
	It had been quite a while since the 1st Cav soldiers sprung the ambush, 
	and there was no further enemy contact. So, the Medevac crew of Okie, Baby 
	Huey, Fergie, Brady, and Tiny T bounced on the mission without assistance 
	from armed Cobra attack helicopters. They would conduct this mission only 
	with the defensive aid of the two M-60 machine guns mounted toward the rear 
	of the cargo compartment, more lovingly called the hellhole.
	The mission went routinely well, with the crew picking up one wounded US 
	soldier and one VC soldier. Both soldiers were sporting brand new gunshot 
	wounds. There was profuse bleeding from both soldiers, causing some pools of 
	blood on the cargo floor for a time. But Brady had no trouble assessing the 
	injuries and providing life-saving procedures.
	The return flight promised to be a routine flight. The pilots listened to 
	songs on the aircraft's radio that received AM radio stations. The Top 10 
	Hits for the third week of October 1970 presented an accurate description of 
	surviving a year in Vietnam. RAINDROPS KEEP FALLIN' ON MY HEAD by B.J. 
	Thomas was an oft-heard chant in "the bush," and every soldier dreamed of 
	LEAVING ON A JET PLANE. SOMEDAY WE'LL BE TOGETHER as sung by the talented 
	Diana Ross and the Supremes putting the soldier DOWN ON THE CORNER and the 
	Jackson 5 wailing out, I WANT YOU BACK.
	Halfway back to FSB Mace, just coming up on the French train (an 
	incapacitated old train from the French occupation), this routine mission 
	changed abruptly. While in flight, a radio call came in from the 2/8 Cav 
	unit that had heavy enemy contact resulting in a soldier with a sucking 
	chest wound. Sucking chest wounds are critical situations caused when a 
	bullet pierces the chest cavity. This wound allows air into the cavity 
	between the rib cage and the lungs, eventually collapsing the soldier's lung 
	– the soldier slowly suffocates.
	Baby Huey talked over the radio to the young medic on the ground and let 
	him know it would be about 20 minutes before he could return. He first had 
	to drop off the two patients on the aircraft, get a couple of JP-4 aviation 
	fuel squirts, team up with two Blue Max Cobra attack aircraft, and return 
	for the ground medic's patient.
	With the aircraft slicing through the air slightly above the maximum 
	allowable speed of 124 knots, their Medevac sped toward the clearing station 
	landing pad at FSB Mace. Okie was on the radio coordinating with the 
	clearing station so that medics would be waiting at the helipad. He quickly 
	changed radio frequency and put the warning order out to a Blue Max Red Team 
	(two attack aircraft). Since the unit was in contact with the enemy, Blue 
	Max would accompany us on the medical evacuation.
	With speed acquired from months working as a cohesive team, Brady and 
	Tiny T off-loaded the patients, and Baby Huey conducted a short high hover 
	over to the refueling pad. There was no time to shut down the aircraft. With 
	the Lycoming engine still operating at idle and exhaust gases thrusting aft 
	over the tail boom at over one thousand degrees Fahrenheit, Fergie added a 
	few gallons of JP-4 jet fuel in the helicopter.
	Now, at three-quarters full of fuel and two Blue Max attack aircraft 
	trailing, the Medevac raced toward the wounded soldier with the sucking 
	chest wound. On the way, the three helicopters flew in an inverted 
	V-of-three formation: the Medevac in the lead and one attack aircraft 
	trailing slightly behind on either side. No one knew this formation was 
	about to result in almost losing a Medevac helicopter and its seasoned crew 
	of five.
	The traditional role for the Blue Max Cobras covering a Medevac 
	conducting a hoist operation was that one of the Cobras would circle the 
	Medevac at a couple of hundred feet above the jungle canopy and provide 
	mini-gun close-in support attempting to keep the enemy soldiers from 
	mounting a deadly attack against the Medevac. The second Cobra would circle 
	180 degrees out from the first Cobra and at an altitude of about 1500 feet. 
	The high Cobra was ready to support the Medevac by firing 2.5 folding fin 
	rockets at the enemy position. By setting up in these orbits, at least one 
	Cobra was always prepared to provide instant assistance to the Medevac.
	But, having arrived in a V-of-three formation, the Medevac came to a 
	stationary hover above the triple canopy jungle. The Blue Max Red Team split 
	off and began establishing their orbits while leaving the solitary Medevac 
	and exposing it to enemy fire until in their traditional orbits. An 
	insignificant error of arriving in a V-of-three formation left our Medevac 
	unprotected by Blue Max and presented as the world's biggest and noisiest 
	target for the enemy forces.
	Almost immediately, the enemy unleashed a fury of automatic weapon 
	bullets on the Medevac with pinpoint accuracy. In tenths of seconds, the 
	enemy fire engulfed every crew position in a hail of AK-47 rifle and machine 
	gunfire. Once at a hover, Baby Huey and Okie coordinated with the medic on 
	the ground and the Blue Max Red Team. Fergie and Tiny T were 
	"rocking-and-rolling," firing their M-60 machine guns fiercely to subdue the 
	enemy fire. Fergie was shooting at muzzle flashes in the jungle and watching 
	fuel spew from the punctured fuel cell right next to his left foot.
	At one point, Brady yelled over the intercom, " "Fergies hit, and there 
	are brains all over!" Though Baby Huey was at the controls and maintaining 
	the aircraft at a stationary hover, he looked over his shoulder into the 
	cargo compartment. 
	One quick look – just an instance – told the whole story. Fergie was 
	blown out of the hell hole when a bullet hit his ammo links and flailed 
	around on the cargo compartment floor. Brady was on top of him in an attempt 
	to keep Fergie from slipping out the open cargo door of the Medevac. There 
	was blood all over the floor and brains sprayed on Fergie's two-piece Nomex 
	flight suit, as well as brains and skull pieces splattered on the 
	sound-proof blanket surrounding the transmission compartment. Brady 
	remembers Fergie's eyes were as large as silver dollars. But Brady quickly 
	discerned Fergie didn't have severe injuries and relayed that to everyone 
	over the intercom. 
	
	Two 
	enemy rife rounds pierced the left windscreen two seconds later. Both 
	bullets missed Baby Huey's face by only inches. They then exited through the 
	greenhouse Plexiglas and aircraft skin above Huey's seat. Baby Huey 
	remembers vividly the hot metal bullet jackets dropping in his lap and 
	burning a sensitive part of his male anatomy. The bullets also created 
	capillary wounds to his face making the bloody face look worse than it was. 
	At this, Okie also came on the controls. 
	
		
		Where two bullets aimed at Baby Huey
hit windscreen.
		
	 
	
		
		Where bullets passed through roof.
		
	 
	
	If either of us were wounded or killed, the helicopter would
	hopefully 
	not crash into the jungle canopy. Enemy automatic rifle bullets continued to 
	slam into the Medevac with the unmistakable thud sound when a bullet hits 
	the aircraft. With rounds coming up through the floor under Okie's seat, 
	piercing the right jump door and barely missing Brady and Tiny T. There was 
	no safe place to be in the helicopter – no location providing better 
	protection. 
	
		
		Where bullet passed through floor
under Okie's seat.
		
	 
	
	With 
	Okie at the controls, the Medevac pulled up from the jungle and departed as 
	fast as possible. Baby Huey had already coordinated with Blue Max, so there 
	wasn't an accidental mid-air collision between Blue Max and the Medevac. 
	After parking the Medevac, Baby Huey looked left and was so glad to see 
	Fergie on the skid toe, unlocking the armored plate and sliding it aft. 
	The 1st Cav had a shortage of ammo belt guides for the M-60 machine gun. 
	The ammo belt guide's function is to direct the linked ammo belt into the 
	machine gun's receiver. Not having a belt guide, Fergie knew an empty 
	C-ration can could be a suitable substitution. Fergie had decided if he got 
	shot down and had to survive and escape in the jungle, he would use the full 
	C-ration can. More specifically, a full C-ration of franks and beans. 
	A bullet struck Fergie's belt right as it went around the bean can and 
	blew the gun out of Fergie's hands. The force blew him out of the hell hole 
	nearly into Brady's lap. Either the heat from the belted ammo crossing the 
	C-ration can, as Fergie shot, or the enemy bullet striking the ammo belt 
	made the C-ration can explode. The exploded contents of the can left Fergie 
	splattered with franks and beans and a generous portion of Army food 
	splattering the sound-proof blanket on the transmission compartment.
	
		
		 Where bullet almost hit Fergie.
		
	 
	Meanwhile, 
	under the impression Fergie had a severe wound, Brady announced that Fergie 
	was hit over the intercom. Brady dove on top of Fergie to keep his flailing 
	body from undulating out the open left cargo door. Once into the cargo 
	compartment, Fergie found his wire to the intercom disconnected, so he could 
	not tell Brady he was all right.
	Fortunately, after having enemy bullets pepper the aircraft just inches 
	away for each crew member, we all were seen at the clearing station with 
	only shrapnel wounds.
The blood on the cargo floor was from the previous 
	mercy mission, and the "brains" were nothing more than an exploded C-ration 
	can of franks and beans. And from then on, we dubbed Fergie with the 
	catchphrase of "Fergs and Beans!"
	
	
		
		
		Where bullet aimed at Don Tegethoff
traveled through aircraft.
		
	 
	
		
		
Don Tegethoff lights up after mission.
	 
	
		
		
		Fergie shows Mike Vinyard where bullet
hit belt guide.
	 
	
		
		
		Okie surveys damage to rotor blade.
	 
	
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Downed Bird
By Baby huey
	It was July 1970 when I was flying copilot to CPT Mohica and we were 
	spending a week at Tay Nihn in the “Land of the red dust” supporting Medevac 
	Charlie. If you didn’t take a shower often you got this beautiful bronze 
	all-over tan look…until you took a shower and all the red dirt dust washed 
	down the drain.
	We had our normal share of missions but then a lull set in and CPT Mohica 
	announced he was going to take a shower and I would stay in the pilot’s 
	hooch in case of a mission. Sure enough a few minutes later the RTO came 
	running in announcing we had a downed bird mission. I ran out of the hooch 
	and sprinted by the shower yelling for Mohica to finish because we had a 
	downed bird mission. He told me to go get strapped in and start the 
	aircraft.
	Almost before I got strapped in Mohica came flip-flopping out to the 
	revetment wearing only his towel wrapped around his waist and flip-flops. As 
	his nearly naked body got strapped in, I had the aircraft up and running and 
	was pulling out of the revetment.
	As he navigated, and I flew, we raced up toward the Cambodian border to 
	work this downed aircraft mission. As we got overhead the small field the 
	downed aircraft was in, we could see the crew had made it out safely. About 
	this time Mohica says, “I’ve got the controls” and begins to set up an orbit 
	and start an approach to land just short of the aircraft on the ground. As 
	he comes down on final the crewchief of the other bird starts giving ground 
	guide hand-and-arm signals to guide us safely in for landing.
	On short final the crewchief begins to giggle and then falls to the 
	ground in a fit of hysterical laughter. One can only image the view this 
	crewchief had looking up through our left seat chin bubble and up under 
	Mohica’s toweled lower body!
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