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Someone shoved a red-hot soldering iron through the back of the right seat into my lower back! That’s what it felt like without question. I am flying my Maule M7-260 on straight floats at fifteen hundred feet, ironically, on an emergency evacuation from a cruise ship destination in the Bahamas.
A personal telephone call from the Captain of a Holland America ship signified the importance of assistance urgently needed. A couple of passengers onboard had received a call that their daughter had been kidnapped back home in the US. They needed to catch a commercial flight from Nassau back home as soon as possible.
I was fairly close at hand on a neighboring island so my arrival was swift which impressed the captain. Two distraught souls were loaded on to the seaplane and taking off from the lagoon was always an easy runway. We were about half way back to Nassau when the kidney stone near crippled me in an instant! I grasped the yoke tightly and somehow managed to keep my utter distress from the passengers. This was no easy task as the husband was seated in the co-pilot position and the wife directly behind me.
There was no question what had hit me internally, that excruciating pain in the lower back to one side I had heard well described before. A marine VHF radio had been installed in my panel for communication with vessels and islands I was working with. A catamaran below me answered my urgent request for a phone call to a friend living near my ramp location on a lake in Nassau. I would be needing assistance with a taxi for my passengers to the international airport which was just minutes away and a ride to the hospital for one very distressed pilot.
ATC gave me a priority approach and landing in the lake. The cars were both there waiting when we docked. On final approach to the water another awful wave of pain ran through me making this landing a one-shot event in my mind. With thousands of hours on floats, my landings were most often perfection, for it had become an art form in my mind. This one certainly needed some polish with two minor skips above the water.
Maneuvering into the ramp is always a challenge but my friend, ready with a line, captured the forward cleat on the first try. The couple were helped off the seaplane and we wished them well in finding their daughter. While difficult to believe, I later received a call from Holland America praising my service, but informing me the passengers had refused to pay for their flight and the kidnapping turned out to be a hoax. Just another day in commercial float flying.
After the scoundrels had departed for the airport, I vomited in response to the intense pain. The hospital was over 30 minutes away, but oh, how wonderful the morphine felt prior to the operation. As I recovered, my much better half put me on the mat about not flying with a bottle of water in the aircraft noting that I could be considered the ‘preverbal camel’ and go all day flying without drinking.
I pled guilty as charged and changed my liquid consumption while out in the field and at home. So fellow pilots, take note and heed my lady’s fairly forceful insistence. My aviation doctor, for those interested, advised for the kidney stone prone lads and lasses out there that a 100mg of magnesium daily curtails calcium build up in some. I take it now and have never had one since.
- My mid-flight medical emergency - September 2, 2024
- Friday photo:If pigs could fly - August 9, 2024
- Friday photo: fishing from the wing of a Maule - September 22, 2023
Sounds like an “Overly Rushed Job,” in Learning How to Fly!”
You lost me Roland with this comment?? Expand maybe, thanks
I flew international MedEvac in Lear 36XR’s from 2007 thru 2013. Like you I neglected to hydrate sufficiently (the pilots’ restroom is very inconvenient in Lears). Sure enough, I ended up with a stone one night. Fortunately, I was at home. When I got to the hospital, one of the nurses was a flight nurse I’d flown with. I BEGGED for drugs. I’m in a King Air now and a long leg is 2 hours. Much preferable as I age. Thanks for the memories! LOL
Thanks for sharing Terry! One wonders how something so small can inflict what they do!!