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    VMAT-203 Replacement Pilots adapt to the rigorous ranges of MCAS Yuma

    VMAT-203 Replacement Pilots adapt to the rigorous ranges of MCAS Yuma

    Photo By Pfc. Brendan King | 1st Lt. Donald Groves, a native of Germantown, Tenn., prepares to take flight in an...... read more read more

    YUMA, AZ, UNITED STATES

    03.15.2013

    Story by Pfc. Brendan King 

    Marine Corps Air Station Yuma

    MARINE CORPS AIR STATION YUMA, Ariz. - Working together to complete a common goal is the backbone of the Marine Corps and something that the pilots learn quickly at the beginning stages of flight training. Many new Marine pilots are sent to Marine Corps Air Station Yuma to receive the unique training that it offers.

    “Coming out here I have really begun to see how the entire Marine Corps work together to train each individual and how so many Marines work tirelessly just to make sure we complete our mission as Marine Corps pilots,” said 1st Lt. Donald Groves, a native of Germantown, Tenn.

    Groves, along with Capt. Eric Galloway, a native of Conover, N.C., are serving as category one fleet replacement pilots for Marine Attack Training Squadron 203 and are getting the best of what MCAS Yuma has to offer to new and experienced Marine Corps pilots.

    Fleet replacement pilots are either newly winged aviators (Category I), aviators transitioning from one type aircraft to another (Category II), or aviators returning to the cockpit after a period of non-flying (Category III). After completing the training regimen, graduates are assigned to fleet squadrons throughout the Marine Corps.

    VMAT-203 main responsibility is to train in the Marine Corps new winged pilots to fly the AV-8B Harrier. Also known as the Hawks, the squadron is based at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point and falls under the command of Marine Aircraft Group 14.

    Although, at the moment most of their pilots like Groves and Galloway fall under the Command of Marine Aircraft Group 13.

    “Right now we work for MAG-13 while we’re out here, the Colonel (MAG-13 CO, Col. Michael Gough) made that quite clear when we met him,” said Galloway, a native of Conover. “We definitely want to make the most of the opportunity and get the best out of the training the Marine Corps has tasked us with.”

    The new replacement pilots for VMAT-203 have never been challenged with the training that MCAS Yuma offers. Coming from the east coast for all of their training before coming to Yuma these pilots are not used to this terrain or climate. They also have to get used to the nearly 30 different flight ranges that MCAS Yuma offers, compared to the four at MCAS Cherry Point.

    “Yuma gives us much more of a real combat environment with all the different ranges, they can throw almost any kind of scenario at you,” said Groves. “Coming out here has caused me to stay on my toes a lot more than I ever have before and, I know that I can’t get too comfortable. That’s what I was really hoping to get out from it, just help me find that new level of focus that I know you need to be a successful Marine Corps pilot.”

    MCAS Yuma is currently the busiest air station in the Marine Corps, offering excellent year-round flying conditions and thousands of acres of open terrain for air-to-ground weapons ranges and associated restricted airspace for military flight operations.

    The training that Groves and Galloway have gained from the air station is one of the more valuable necessities that MCAS Yuma offers to any pilot that comes here.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 03.15.2013
    Date Posted: 03.15.2013 18:28
    Story ID: 103564
    Location: YUMA, AZ, US
    Hometown: CONOVER, NC, US
    Hometown: GERMANTOWN, TN, US
    Hometown: YUMA, AZ, US

    Web Views: 232
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN