Christmas Eve…

My traditional post-

Jeff MacNelly was a friend of the military, and especially of the Navy.  He did a number of ‘special’ cartoons over the years for those of us who served…

This is one of my favorites…  Sadly he passed way too young in 2000 due to lymphoma.

shoexmas

Author unknown, but a damn good one…

This one goes out to Brigid, Frito, Flake, Juvat, JP, JimJim, Wing, Joe and all the other aviators out there…

‘Twas the night before Christmas, and out on the ramp,
Not an airplane was stirring, not even a Champ.
The aircraft were fastened to tiedowns with care,
In hopes that come morning, they all would be there.

The fuel trucks were nestled, all snug in their spots,
With gusts from two-forty at 39 knots.
I slumped at the fuel desk, now finally caught up,
And settled down comfortably, resting my butt.

When the radio lit up with noise and with chatter,
I turned up the scanner to see what was the matter.
A voice clearly heard over static and snow,
Called for clearance to land at the airport below.

He barked his transmission so lively and quick,
I’d have sworn that the call sign he used was “St. Nick”;
I ran to the panel to turn up the lights,
The better to welcome this magical flight.

He called his position, no room for denial,
“St. Nicholas One, turnin’ left onto final.”
And what to my wondering eyes should appear,
But a Rutan-built sleigh, with eight Rotax Reindeer!

With vectors to final, down the glideslope he came,
As he passed all fixes, he called them by name:
“Now Ringo! Now Tolga! Now Trini and Bacun!
On Comet! On Cupid!” What pills was he takin’?

While controllers were sittin’, and scratchin’ their head,
They phoned to my office, and I heard it with dread,
The message they left was both urgent and dour:
“When Santa pulls in, have him please call the tower.”

He landed like silk, with the sled runners sparking,
Then I heard “Left at Charlie,” and “Taxi to parking.”
He slowed to a taxi, turned off of three-oh
And stopped on the ramp with a “Ho, ho-ho- ho…”

He stepped out of the sleigh, but before he could talk,
I ran out to meet him with my best set of chocks.
His red helmet and goggles were covered with frost
And his beard was all blackened from Reindeer exhaust.

His breath smelled like peppermint, gone slightly stale,
And he puffed on a pipe, but he didn’t inhale.
His cheeks were all rosy and jiggled like jelly,
His boots were as black as a cropduster’s belly.

He was chubby and plump, in his suit of bright red,
And he asked me to “fill it, with hundred low-lead.”
He came dashing in from the snow-covered pump,
I knew he was anxious for drainin’ the sump.

I spoke not a word, but went straight to my work,
And I filled up the sleigh, but I spilled like a jerk.
He came out of the restroom, and sighed in relief,
Then he picked up a phone for a Flight Service brief.

And I thought as he silently scribed in his log,
These reindeer could land in an eighth-mile fog.
He completed his pre-flight, from the front to the rear,
Then he put on his headset, and I heard him yell, “Clear!”

And laying a finger on his push-to-talk,
He called up the tower for clearance and squawk.
“Take taxiway Charlie, the southbound direction,
Turn right three-two-zero at pilot’s discretion.”

He sped down the runway, the best of the best,
“Your traffic’s a Grumman, inbound from the west.”
Then I heard him proclaim, as he climbed through the night,
“Merry Christmas to all! I have traffic in sight.”

TSO brings the goodness…

I hope this night finds you safe in home and hearth with family. Say a prayer for those in the military on duty world-wide who protect our freedoms…

Comments

Christmas Eve… — 12 Comments

  1. We observe RED Fridays here (R E D = Remember Everyone Deployed), but those who are on deployment during Christmas touch our heart closer, warmer, and more precious.
    I had the great good fortune to be part of the motley crew of young enlisted men stationed in and near Stuttgart/Ludwigsburg who were adopted by the family of Air Force Sergeant Lloyd Fann who lived with his wife and four kids in the Pattonville Housing Area. They opened up their home to us, and practically every weekend, their living room was packed out with us junior troops, eating, mostly singing, and talking about the Lord. Christmas of 1973 and 1974 would have been much lonelier without them.
    I give thanks and honor to the Fann family, and to everyone who made their homes welcome places for lonely troops. It was a high point in my spiritual development.

  2. And a Peaceful Christmas to you as well. As well as our current military deployed to locations around the globe.

    When did Christmas become so frantic ?

  3. Memories of Christmas Carols lead by the XO on the Helo flight deck. A Merry Christmas to you and your crew! Dusty in here.

  4. Memories of a young Bachelor LT covering Missile Alerts for the married crews. Christmases, Thanksgivings, and New Years spent beneath the Minot permafrost. Merry Christmas to all the Silent Sentinels of the Northern Tier. You are the Keepers of the Peace!

  5. Some of us sat on the ramp praying for those aviators and that they’d get us where we needed to be to do the job we had to do.

    Merry Christmas all!

  6. Merry Christmas, Old NFO! Memories of Christmas while deployed are hard to dismiss. I was fortunate to spend one at home during my enlistment, but many did not/do not. May God bless them, every one!

  7. Never read this before. Loved it!
    Merry Christmas and God bless all. 💗 🙏

  8. All- Thank you, and Merry Christmas to you! Yes, standing the watch for the married folks was ‘our’ tradition too! And those holidays far from home sucked. When/if we got mail, the cookies were usually stale crumbs by that point, but we ate/shared them anyway!

  9. Santa comes in many forms.
    Christmas Eve, 1969 Santa appeared as Checker Cab driver and delivered Dad home from his 2nd tour of ‘Nam.
    May everyone’s Christmas be as joyous as that one was.