Monday, August 25, 2014

First Observational Flight to the Interior of Borneo



When the 7am weather reports came in from the interior of Borneo, things did not look good.  At each of the villages we needed to get to that day it had rained significantly the night before, and in fact it was still raining at most of them.  We had a fairly busy day scheduled, including one medical evacuation request, but we had no choice but to delay our departure and hope to get a report of better weather soon.  Bad weather and mountainous terrain are two things that should never be mixed in aviation.  At 8:30 we finally got a report that the rain was subsiding and decided to launch off.  From Tarakan it is about a half hour flight to Malinau, which is the jumping off point to the interior mountain villages of Borneo.  From Tarakan to Malinau the terrain is flat and full of wide meandering rivers and rice fields.  After Malinau the ground rises to form the jungle-covered mountains of Borneo.  We crossed over Malinau at a comfortable 7,500 feet enroute to our first stop in the mountains.  
                                                 The Landscape from Tarakan to Malinau

     Along this first leg of the trip the pilot spent a good deal of the time on the HF radio talking to the different villages we were scheduled to stop at that day.  Each village wanted to know how much weight we could take, and when we might be arriving.  He had to calculate approximately when we would arrive at each point and approximately how much fuel we would have burned by then, in order to determine how much weight we could carry out of there.  On top of that he had to find out if all of the passengers were at each airstrip and ready to go.  If they were not ready we might be more efficient by stopping somewhere else first.  Finally, we had that medical evacuation to think about.  According to the sparse information we received she was having abdominal pain and was described as “relatively serious”.  We thought about going there to get her first, but that airstrip was still hidden under the rain and clouds, and the grass airstrip was still wet, which isn’t a good thing.  Braking effectiveness on short, wet grass can be zero.  We decided to push on to our original first stop.  
                                   Weaving through the cotton balls on our way to the interior

     After circling down through a hole in the clouds we made it to the first village.  The passengers were happy to see us and climbed on board.  After starting the engine though it became clear that the weather had closed in around us in the last 10 minutes and it would be too risky to try to get out of there.  So we shut down and waited.  It was a good opportunity to go hang out with the people there, hear a couple of their stories, and drink some “kopi susu” (instant coffee mix with milk…like a latte!).  An hour and a half later we decided to give it another try.  However, because of the long delay we decided to go get the medical patient first…so our passengers had to wait in the terminal for our return later that day.  It was a short, 15 minute hop over to the village to pick up the medical patient.  The grass was still wet, but the weather was slowly clearing up all around us.  As we taxied to a stop a group of perhaps 40-50 people walked slowly out to the airplane carrying a lady on a stretcher of bamboo.  They laid her under the wing of the airplane and gathered around as the pastor of the village prayed for her.  She did not seem to be doing well at all and was in a more serious condition than we were expecting.  She seemed to be barely conscious as her face was locked in a grimace of pain, and a constant low moan escaped her lips.  The men carefully loaded her into the airplane, lying her down, as her husband and young daughter climbed in the seats next to her.  The seriousness of her mother’s condition was evident from the worry etched into the young daughter’s face as she gently stroked her mother’s hair.  The pilot was faced with a tough decision at this point.  In evaluating the weather he decided that we needed to take off to the south.  However, taking off to the south would mean taking off with a tail wind (a wind blowing down the runway from behind the airplane).  Tailwinds can greatly reduce the performance of an airplane and they must be handled with caution.  As a result he had to ask 1 person to stay behind.  Reducing the load in the airplane would give us the margin we needed to takeoff safely.  One family member who had planned to accompany his mother to the hospital would instead have to stay in the village and wait for news about her via the radio.  As we took off and dodged clouds on the 30 minute flight to Malinau, where an ambulance was waiting, I quietly whispered many prayers for our passenger in the back.  As I looked down and saw nothing but unbroken jungle all the way to the horizon, I realized that without this tiny little airplane to fly her out this woman would have had no options for the medical care she needed.  I thanked the Lord for the privilege of being this lady’s lifeline that day. 
     After that flight the rest of the day was a bit of a whirlwind.  We were 2 hours behind schedule and still had 5 stops to make before heading back to Tarakan.  I got to see the pilot switch into “efficiency mode” as we shuttled people, motorcyles, mail, food, a generator, and many other things between those interior villages.  Finally, at 4:30 pm we took off for the 1 hour flight back to Tarakan.  Even though I had done nothing that day except observe my instructor pilot at work, I was exhausted!  Soon I will have the privilege of carrying out the duties he did so well that day, and I am looking forward to it.  I got to see firsthand how much the people in the interior appreciate and rely on the service that we provide.  I got to see a desperately ill woman receive the medical care she needed, and watch the joy in her daughter’s eyes as she took her first airplane ride!  I am humbled by the great task ahead of me as I begin serving these people with the airplane, and bringing them hope through a warm smile to a nervous child on her first flight, a prayer said for a sick passenger, a chance to share my testimony as we wait for the rain to stop, or however else God chooses to use me here.  




Waiting out the rain in the "MAF terminal" 








 I noticed that every vehicle and even motorcycle in this village had big knobby mud tires installed.  That's a good indication of what condition the roads are in!

 Somewhere down there the medical patient and her family have been waiting for us all morning.  The weather was finally clear enough for us to come in.

                                          Family and friends carrying her out to the airplane.  

         The village gathered around her to pray while the pilot completed his paperwork for the flight

                               We made it to Malinau where an ambulance was waiting for her

                                                 Unbroken jungle as far as the eye can see!

                                                                  Picturesque rice paddies 

                                                              "Wait, we're going there?"

                                                      Turning final and lining up for landing

                                            Short final approach.  Those trees sure felt close!

                                            The kids are excited to check out the airplane

After a long day the island of Tarakan is a welcome sight.  You can see the entire island in this picture.  It's not very big.

Home again!

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"This is what God the Lord says - he who created the heavens and stretched them out, who spread out the earth and all that comes out of it, who gives breath to its people, and life to those who walk on it: I, the Lord, have called you in righteousness; I will take hold of your hand. I will keep you and will make you to be a covenant for the people and a light for the Gentiles, to open eyes that are blind, to free captives from prison and to release from the dungeon those who sit in darkness. Isaiah 42:5-7