Aircraft carried
Greg Risling
NEWPORT BEACH -- Taking stomach-churning dips and loops on a roller
coaster can’t compare to a launch off an aircraft carrier.
Former Newport Beach City Councilman Art Gronksy got a unique look at
naval operations earlier this month when he and several of his friends --
including Cannery manager Bill Hamilton and Balboa Bay Club president
Henry Schielein -- were guests aboard the U.S. aircraft carrier John C.
Stennis.
The trip was sort of a payback for the group of Newport residents, who
are active members of the Navy League, a civilian support group for the
military branch. The organization assists naval service men and women
when they are in port.
Gronsky, a Navy airman during World War II, was eager to take an inside
peek into one of the Navy’s largest vessels.
“It’s one of the most exciting opportunities to witness firsthand a naval
operation,” Gronsky said. “It’s real good to know we have that type of
equipment and expertise to ensure a safe country. Getting to see how it
works, let’s you know your tax dollars are being well spent.”
The group was given the red-carpet treatment upon their departure from
San Diego. They flew out to the carrier, which was about 100 miles off
the coast, in a twin-engine aircraft. The group safely arrived aboard the
carrier when they were hooked by a mechanism that allows planes to land.
For two days, the men were given a tour of the ship, watched jet planes
arrive and depart and ate with the captain and his ranking staff.
The carrier is named after John Stennis, a senator who served 41 years
and saw eight presidents pass through the White House. The ship, a
Nimitz-class carrier, measures 1,100 feet in length and is home to more
than 6,000 crew.
The group also slept on board, but the change in scenery wasn’t easy to
adapt to, Gronsky said. He and bunkmate Hamilton’s temporary sleeping
arrangements were under the ship’s blast deflector. The piece of
equipment lifts and shuts when a plane arrives or leaves. That movement
is accompanied by a strange hissing sound. It apparently didn’t bother
Hamilton who slept soundly. The same couldn’t be said of Gronsky, who was
restless from the sporadic noise.
“An aircraft carrier is a noisy place,” he said. “I couldn’t sleep much,
just a couple of hours. There was enough noise to wake the dead.”
Most of the group had some kind of military experience, but they couldn’t
pass up a chance to land on a carrier.
“Not many civilians get an opportunity to land on a carrier,” Hamilton
said. “That’s the first time I ever did that. It’s an incredible force
that doesn’t last very long. It throws you off the deck like a catapult
into the air. Nothing compares to the forces you feel.”
Other members of the group echoed Hamilton’s excitement.
“When that hook grabs the plane you definitely it,” Schielein said. “I
thought I left my stomach 20 feet behind me when we took off. It was a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”
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