Flying in bad weather - Part 1 of 2
Heroes Remember
Transcript
To give the families an understanding of the conditions in which
we flew, I told them that a, about an experience I had which
almost duplicated that in which Bill Rogers and his crew lost
their lives. It happened earlier during the same monsoon season
over the same jungle covered mountains. We were returning empty
from Meiktila in the central plain to our base in Tulihal in the
Imphal Valley. It was late afternoon, we were flying our third
mission that day. As we approached the jungle covered hills from
the east, we were confronted by a wall of thunderheads in front
of us. Carrying no oxygen and not being pressurized, we are at a
ceiling limit of 12,000 feet to 14,000 feet, the cumulonimbus
clouds normally towered above 25,000 feet, with their bottoms
covering the 35,000 foot hills, I saw a patch of bright sunlight
between two boiling clouds at about 6,000 feet. I commenced
climbing to fly through it to the other side of the line of
clouds and into the valley where our base was located.
As we approached to the hole, it quickly closed and before
I could turn the aircraft around we were suddenly
caught in a steep and violent updraft.
Description
Mr. Romanow reads a piece he wrote concerning a crew lost to weather, and a similar experience he had.
Joseph Romanow
Mr. Romanow was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, in 1921, to parents who immigrated to Canada in 1911. Mr. Romanow grew up in a Ukranian community and he learned to speak English from his playmates. He joined the Air Force from a youth group, was a mechanic for two years and then trained in Canada and England. He was able to fly in India and Europe, flying many different types of planes. After his university education he returned to the Air Force and worked with the Avro Arrow team.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 01:39
- Person Interviewed:
- Joseph Romanow
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Burma
- Battle/Campaign:
- Burma
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- 62, 435, 437 Squadron
- Occupation:
- Bomber Pilot
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