A career highlight...

kayoh190

Administrator
Management Council Member
Joined
May 29, 2014
Messages
4,315
Display Name

Display name:
Kayoh@190
I don't normally start threads because you guys have much more interesting stories than I do, but I got a chance to do something yesterday that was pretty friggin' incredible, and I thought I'd share.

The Gary Sinise Foundation has been involved with a program called Snowball Express for last few years. Supporting the kids of Fallen Heroes, Snowball Express has been going on for about a decade now, and my employer provides airplanes to get the kids to the retreat destination - this year being Disney World. I've been at my airline for almost 6 years, and each year I've volunteered to be part of this but not selected. We have hundreds of pilots volunteer (I heard it was 800 this time around!) for only a few dozen spots across 13 airplanes, so when I got the phone call to fly a couple of weeks back, I was stoked. I knew it was going to be awesome, but I wasn't prepared for how special it would be.

Friday evening I was flown to Detroit to meet up with the rest of the crew, and Saturday morning we got up early to decorate the interior of the airplane. We were to take a bunch of kids and their families from DTW to JFK, pick up more kids at JFK (many flown in from international destinations), fly down to ORF to pick up another group of kids, and finally the airplane would head down to MCO to drop everyone off. Another crew would fly the ORF-MCO leg (and then take the plane empty back to ORD) - with such a long list of volunteers they wanted to limit us to 2 legs each.

tracks.jpg

It's hard to express how awesome the entire experience was - Channel 11 in NYC covered our JFK stop here (watch the video):

https://www.pix11.com/news/snowball-express-brings-joy-support-to-families-of-fallen-heroes

The kids got off the plane at JFK to take part in the festivities and were greeted at the gate by all branches of military standing at attention, veterans groups, a bagpipe band, members of the NY police and fire departments - it was incredible. They all started clapping as the kids stepped off the jetbridge. I've never been much of a crier, but the crew and I were walking behind the line of kids, and as I stepped into the gate area, I ended up retreating back into the jetbridge to get my s*** together. I wasn't alone - my Captain was there doing the same thing. ;)

Incidentally Sean (from the video above) wants to be an airline pilot. I'm still waiting on the pictures, but during the JFK stop I threw a yellow vest on Sean, found a mechanic with an escort badge, and we did the walk around together. He loved it, and even Santa came down to help.

Anyway, sorry for the long post. It was just really, *really* friggin' cool. Highlight of my career, and will likely remain that way. :)

IMG_4593.jpg
IMG_4596.jpg
 
Great to see your face! You will be hard pressed to make a better smile than that one.
I have a Special Olympics Silver Medal, earned with a sailboat and a crew of mentally challenged boys. There is a special thrill when they get their act together and achieve things they thought impossible. The adult volunteers have a similar thrill.
 
There was a big Snowball Express decorated-gate and film crew waiting for an plane at LAX yesterday when I was passing through there... Clearly there was big fanfare planned, so I assumed it was for an incoming flight. Maybe it was for folks headed for JFK that day, or could there be a Disneyland (West) version going on simultaneously?
 
extremely cool. i had to retreat to my private jetbridge to get my **** together. well done, sir!
 
Thanks all! I was unpaid, but it was easily the most compensated I've ever been for a day of flying. Definitely an honor. Still can't believe it.

There was a big Snowball Express decorated-gate and film crew waiting for an plane at LAX yesterday when I was passing through there... Clearly there was big fanfare planned, so I assumed it was for an incoming flight. Maybe it was for folks headed for JFK that day, or could there be a Disneyland (West) version going on simultaneously?

They only do one destination in a given year, so my guess is that kids came in to LAX from overseas or nearby, then taken to MCO from there. I know the foundation buys tickets for kids to get to the cities where a Snowball originates, but I'm unclear on the big picture stuff. I can tell you all about SNOWBALL 2 (woohoo!), but not much about the other routes.
 
Back
Top