The Falklands


There are three of us pilots on the flight from Anchorage to Hong Kong, one captain and two co-pilots (known as first officers, by those with a title complex). The other co-pilot and I were discussing our pasts, like most pilots do to pass the time, and I discovered that he was Argentine and has lived in the U.S. for the last six years. Alfredo is getting his U.S. citizenship soon — a great guy, but unfortunately, he will add to the liberal voting bloc :o)

He was a pilot in the Argentine military back in 1982. I immediately asked him what he thought of Margaret Thatcher and he laughed. He continued to regale stories from the war and how the Brits would shoot at ships, just as his friends were launching off the decks of those ships in navy fighters. Asked why he thought that Argentina would want to fight the British, he talked about how there was economic hardship in the country at the time, so a war may spur on national pride and recovery. There also was a sense that the Brits wouldn’t fight as hard, being so far from home, for just a few islands. He felt that they had a fighting chance, but that they didn’t count on Reagan sending in help. Looking back, he said, it would have been obvious that Reagan would try and help Thatcher.

Fast forward twenty five years. A lot of the British Aces from that war are now senior training captains at Cathay Pacific. As a matter of fact, a great check captain Paul Barton, the one who did my base training – where we practice takeoffs and landings, was the first British Harrier pilot with a kill in the Falklands war. He probably shot at my new friend Alfredo! When Alfredo was hired and did his initial checkrides, Paul Barton was the examining check captain for him. Alfredo’s sim parter was also in the Falklands war. As they were in the middle of their training, Fredo’s sim partner asked him when he flew in Argentina. He answered, “In the early 80’s.” His sim partner laughed and said, I was in her Majesty’s Navy, and I’ll bet I shot at you! They had a good laugh about it. Alfredo likes to remind the British guys that the weapons technology was so much more advanced in the Royal Navy than what he had. “The Brits could just click the fire button and the missile would launch and head for the targeted aircraft, chase it, and blow it away. They could even fire on an Argentine airplane coming straight at them and if the missile missed, it would turn around and follow the target! We had nothing like that, so we earned our kills.”

I guess time does heal all wounds (or it wounds all heels, I can’t remember). Alfredo can laugh about it now, but I find it more than ironic that when he came to work at Cathay Pacific as a new hire, he had a sim partner and then a checkride given by pilots who tried to kill him earlier in his life! Luckily, everyone is around to laugh about the stories and I guess it proves that the pilots at Cathay are truly diverse.

TobyLaura.com

Vladimir Photo


One of the last flights that I flew at Chautauqua, I brought my camera along to take a few cockpit photos. It was also the flight that Laura came along on, so that she could be my passenger. The blog about that story is here. Anyway, I took a photo of the co-pilot Vladimir Naskovski and sent it to him.

A few months later, he got a call from a Macedonian Magazine that was doing stories about Macedonian airline pilots around the world. He sent them his story and included my photo. My photo of him showed up on the front page of the story! Now I can say I’m published, sort of. I don’t get hung up on photo rights and all that stuff and am just happy for him and that the photo worked out. Now, if I could only read the article. Clicking the picture may increase its size for you.

TobyLaura.com

Turning 31


It’s hard for me to believe that I’m turning thirty one today. Sure, I’m certainly grateful to continue to enjoy birthdays, but if I thought that thirty seemed old, thirty one seems even older, as I am no longer on the cusp of the thirties, but now firmly entrenched in them.

We’re over the North Pacific, at 11,600 meters, roughly 38,000 feet (we’re in Russian airspace, and they like meters instead of feet). I feel pretty blessed to be spending my birthday aboard a Cathay Pacific 747 that we are piloting from Anchorage to Hong Kong. There are three pilots, and we each get about a three hour break on this 12 hour flight. I’m still not used to being paid to take a break while flying.

Yes, I’d like to be home with Laura, but it’s still pretty cool to be at work. I look at it like an opportunity to be in the cockpit of a 747 for a birthday “free ride” gift. If someone had told me twenty years ago that I’d be flying a 747 for my birthday at thirty one, I would have jumped for joy. I’m still excited, but it is a job, after all.

I get home in a few days, and then I’ll celebrate surviving thirty one years here on Earth with Laura and her family. I hope to get home to Texas to see my family sometime in March, as it’s almost been a year since I’ve been down to the great red dirt state of Texas. My schedule needs to cooperate to make that happen. As I take stock of my life so far, I can see nothing but the gracious blessing of God’s hand, undeservedly so, everywhere I’ve gone. He protected my family growing up in Indonesia, gave me the opportunity to learn to fly and go to school in Indiana, protected my jobs with the airlines, given me a great wife, a house, and family.

With the current economic troubles the globe is having and God’s promise to end this world someday, I have no idea what my future holds, and what will happen in my next thirty one years. But I know, just as I look out the windows and see the sun rising above the clouds, that His hand is protecting me on this airplane, that His hand is also guiding me along life’s turbulent waters, and that He will be blessing me all along the way. Why? It’s simple: He promises too.

There are birthday pics if you click on my photo above.

TobyLaura.com

Wealth Distribution

I keep up with a great blog by Dr. David Dykes and wanted to share a quote from one of his posts:

“You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom.
What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.
The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else.
When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation.
You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.”

— Dr. Adrian Rogers, 1931-2005

TobyLaura.com

Color Blind?

Americans love to champion Dr. Martin Luther King’s quote, where “People will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character” However, in light of this most recent presidential inauguration, I wonder how true that really is in America.

How are we not looking at skin color when this historic presidency is historic only because of skin color? Why do we champion being color blind, and then participate in monumental pomp and circumstance (to the tune of $150 million dollars, much of which is tax dollars) because we see Barack in color?

I am all for showing the rest of the world that we as a nation have moved beyond our racist past. However, the bigger deal we make about Obama being black, the less sincere we sound in “moving past race.” Some would say that the simple fact that Obama was elected shows that we are color blind, but I find that strains credulity with all the hype over his skin color. Would he have defeated Hillary Clinton if he were white? No. The truth is, we have judged Obama (maybe unfairly) by the color of his skin, not the content of his character.

The road ahead of him in the White House is certainly not paved with gold, and the monumental task of solving America’s problems will definitely not be an easy one – I sure wouldn’t want the job right now. But Obama has little to fear. His darlings in the media and his liberal friends who voted for him will make sure that he doesn’t take the fall for any ills that remain after his departure. Why? Because they are judging him by the color of his skin, and don’t want the first black president to fail. My hope is that someday, we will honor Dr. King by truly judging character content instead of skin color.

(Click Obama’s picture for a great article about this by Juan Williams)

TobyLaura.com

Just Enough


Because I’ve taken a new job with Cathay Pacific, I am based out of New York and my flights start and end there. Therefore, I have to commute to New York because I live in Ohio. Commuting is not very cheap for me because I lose a lot of the benefits of free travel that most pilots have because they are employed by a U.S. carrier. U.S. carriers allow pilots of other U.S. carriers to ride for free if there is an open seat, to help them get to work if they don’t live where they are based. I can sometimes get a free ride, on certain airlines and certain situations, but otherwise, I’m on the lookout for cheap airline tickets to JFK. It’s all part of doing business in the airline world.

This last trip I flew, I got a free ride to NYC, but had three bills to pay: one for a bus ride, one for a hotel room, and one for a taxi to take me back to the airport to get home. Those three costs added up to a fairly large sum and even though I could absorb the cost, I wasn’t happy at the prospect of having to pay this all the time, every time I go to work.

But God is a great provider. He kept the children of Israel alive as they wandered in the desert, by providing food for them each day. He allowed food to appear each day, and it would only keep for one day. Those who tried to gather more and stock up for the next day would only find that extra food spoiled. God wanted them to trust him for daily needs on a daily basis. He is a lamp unto our feet, not a huge spotlight shining ahead to show us the next few miles, but only the next few steps.

So how is God a great provider to me? When I checked into the hotel here in Anchorage, I was given an envelope with per diem in it. When I opened it, it was for the exact amount of my three bills: hotel, bus, and cab ride! Not a penny more or less. I think situations like this are more than a coincidence and am excited that God is showing me that he is sufficient for my needs. He may not always provide monetary needs, but he will always provide for those who choose to trust in him.

I’ll finish with this great quote: “God may not always show up when I want him to, but he always shows up on time.”

TobyLaura.com