Essayer OR - Gratuit
HUNTING THE HUNTERS
Flight Journal
|May - June 2025
Memories of a night intruder pilot
THE SEEMINGLY ENDLESS AIR WAR over Europe did not stop when the sun went down. The skies over England came alive almost every night as British Bomber Command sent wave after wave of medium and heavy bombers to selected targets all over the Nazi-controlled continent. These bomber crews had to deal with an onslaught of blinding searchlights, deadly flak and the ruthless night hunters of the Luftwaffe. The Germans had perfected the use of aerial electronic equipment in their singleand twin-engine fighters to assist them in locating the British bomber stream. To counter the Luftwaffe's nightly terror reign over the incoming bombers, twin-engine deHavilland Mosquito fighter-bombers were sent out to seek and destroy the Luftwaffe night fighters. Here is the story of one such pilot who became an ace while hunting the hunters.
A chance meeting started it
In the summer of 1941, my mother and father had warned me about the dangers of hitchhiking, or taking rides from strangers, before I made my way across the U.S. from my home in Seattle. As I headed east with my thumb hanging out over the road, a fellow American, who happened to be a sergeant pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), picked me up. As we drove across the country, the sergeant filled my head with flying adventures and told me that the RCAF was actively enlisting Americans.
When he finally stopped the car to let me out, I did a 180-degree turn and headed back home to get my parents to sign a letter of permission. Soon afterwards, I found myself in Canada as a new recruit with the RCAF. In early 1943, I was reassigned to combat and told I would be flying the Mosquito. Heck, I didn't know what a Mosquito was, let alone had ever seen one in Canada. I was just content to be able to fly something.
Enter the Mosquito
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition May - June 2025 de Flight Journal.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Flight Journal
Flight Journal
RESCUE CATS -PBY Catalina crews save airmen from hostile seas
\"TO A COLD, WET AND HUNGRY AIRMAN, sitting in a rubber dinghy in enemy waters, 600 miles from the nearest friendly base and 600 yards from the nearest enemy installation, the PBY is a breathtakingly beautiful sight.
16 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
A ROLL OF THE DICE
A lucky Liberator crew survives
13 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
DH Sea Vixen
ARGUABLY ONE OF THE MOST IMPRESSIVE CLASSIC JETS, even nearly seven decades after the type entered service, surely is the DH Sea Vixen “Foxy Lady” XP924 (civil registration G-CVIX).
2 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
DESPERATE FIGHT! French fighters of WW II
HISTORY HAS A WAY OF REWRITING ITSELF.
9 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
Powering the Age of Flight
GLENN HAMMOND CURTISS (1878-1930) was often called “The Colossus of Aviation” with good reason.
2 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
DESPERATE MEASURES
Volksjäger, the Luftwaffe's last hope
10 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
THE Fairey Swordfish
Antiquated, yet devastatingly effective
14 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
Tuskegee RED TAILS
The men, the machines, the missions
11 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
THE HIGH-VELOCITY RAPTOR
The F-22A thrust vectoring system is the “bread and butter” of the Raptor's incredible maneuvering capability.
14 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
Mitchells over the Mediterranean
Wavetop warfare: skip-bombing and big guns
13 mins
January - February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

