RocketSTEM Issue #10 - February 2015 | Page 5

By Kaelan Jungmeyer I had an amazing and unique experience at the National Flight Academy. It looked like a real aircraft carrier inside. There were sounds of planes taking off. I felt immediately welcomed. The camp had a very inviting feel. We were separated into “CAGs” which is like the big overall groups. There were three CAGs, a CAG with the older kids, a CAG with the freshmen in high school, and a CAG with anyone younger than them. Within these CAGs there were three different squads. I was a part of the “Rough Raiders”, and in my CAG there were also the “Yellow Jackets” and the “Scorpions”. When I showed up they put me at a table that had my squad all sitting at it. They had us remotely take a test over naval terms and flight basics, then the camp started immediately. The first thing that you noticed was the look. From the outside it looks like a big gray box with the occasional fake porthole on the sides. When you walk through the hallways, there are things like AFFF, or fire fighting material, hoses, and different items along the walls. We went and did our first rounds. We flew, ran comms, and planned missions. We flew experimental triad jet simulators, with hover capabilities which are capable of mach 3 and reaching 90,000 ft. in altitude. We ran comms in the JOK. Running comms meant giving the planes headings, clearing them to take off and land, and helping them when needed. Planning missions happened in the JIK. We would find the speed that we needed to go, the fuel required, the true course on how to get there. We did those three just in the first day. While one squad was running comms, one would be flying and the other would be planning the missions. We flew in the simulators the first day through a obstacle course. We got a late start, so we were working until around ten o’clock. The flight simulators were amazing. There were three screens across the front like a cockpit window. There was a joystick in the center and throttle, rudder control and flaps on the left. On the right there was the co-pilots seat with a mouse that you could turn on comms to talk to the tower. In the center there two touch screens that would show your horizon, speed, altitude, bearing, heading, would allow you to control the burner, which is like turbo, and the fuel indication. We then had thirty minutes of “hygiene time”. After that we settled into our rooms that had three bunks. Most of my squad members were in my room. Lights out were at ten thirty, and that was just the first day. The second day we woke up to yelling RA’s at 06:30. We met in the lounge until 07:30 when we headed down to breakfast. The food was amazing. Between burgers, tacos and pasta, we rarely left food untouched. We would do our rounds of the JIK, JOK and flying usually twice a day. The second day we only did it once because we were still having things explained to us. That day we planned missions, ran comms and flew in a hover obstacle course. This was the first day that we met our morning Squad Chief. She looked somewhat like Emma Stone and was awesome. Our Night Chief was equally, if not more, awesome. We did evening games with him that included ninja, invisible ball and face off. Face off was fun because you asked the person that you were facing off against random questions and it made you think on your feet. In categories, one member of a squad would often go against another member of another squad. The ref would call out a category, like a fruit, and the first one to say something in this category would win and face the next challenger. Before we flew or ran comms, we would meet in a briefing room with one other squad. That night we played games and had “hygiene time ”. The third day we woke up bright and early to one of the most intense days. We ran one of our first true missions. We searched for illegal planes. There was a 180 degree field that was 120 nautical miles across. Each group within a squad (a pilot and a co-pilot) would cover a sixth of the semi-circle. It was difficult because you had to fly low to the water in a zig-zag 03 www.RocketSTEM .org 03