When USS Shangri-La (CVS-38) left its pier at Naval Station Mayport
Fla., on the morning of 5 March 1970, a remarkable WestPac deployment
had
begun. Not only was it the final cruise for the veteran carrier, but it
was also the last for Fighter Squadron VF-111 in the venerable F-8
Crusader.
For Sundowners CO, CDR Charles Dimon it was to be his fifth Vietnam
combat
deployment, whereas others were on their first.
For VF-111, it was to be the seventh visit to the stormy waters off
Vietnam. The squadron had deployed in Midway (CVA-41) with CVW-2 in
1965,
Oriskany (CVA-34) with CVW-16 in 1966 and again in 1967-'68 and
Ticonderoga
(CVA-14) with CVW-16 in 1969. A special VF- 111 Detachment 1 made
two deployments in Intrepid (CVA-11) as pant of CVW-l0.
On this seventh deployment, the Sundowners were part of Carrier Air
Wing Eight, an East Coast air wing made up of VF-111 and VF-162 (F-8H),
VA-172 and VA-12 (A-4C), and VA-152 (A-4E). Detachments included
VAW-121
(E-IB), VFP-63 (RF-8G), VAR-b (KA-3B) and HC-2 (UH-2C).
To Vietnam the Long Way Around
VF-111 was aboard with only four aircraft, seven pilots and 97
enlisted
men when Shangri-La sailed. The remainder of the unit, eight aircraft,
10 officers and 82 enlisted men, remained behind at NAS Miramar for 22
days before flying to NAS Cubi Point under the leadership of the XO,
CDR
Bill Rennie. CDR "Stinger" Dimon was among those that sailed in
Shangri-La
with all pilots scheduled to leave the squadron during the cruise.
CVW-8
flew many training sorties on their way to Southeast Asia, but not all
were without incident.
On 9 March, a VF-162 Crusader crashed into the sea northeast of French
Guiana and its pilot, LTJG F.C. Green III, was lost. Five days later,
life
took a more pleasant turn in the form of a port call at Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil. CDR Dimon remembers it as fun.
"The night we departed, I came back to the ship on the so called 'last
boat.' When I came aboard, I suggested they run another boat, as there
were still quite a few people on the beach, and the ship's XO was
asleep
in his cabin. The logistics to get them from Rio to Cubi Point, our
next
stop, would have been a nightmare. Although the XO did not like my
suggestion
very much when he found out, and really chewed on me the next day, I
felt
I was right, since no one was left behind."
After rounding Cape Horn, Shang set course for the Philippines and
anchored at Subic Bay on 5 April 1970, the point where both elements of
the Sandowners would join. Chuck Dimon remembers:
"Before leaving Miramar, the squadron managed to 'procure' a pickup
truck and a Falcon sedan for official and unofficial transportation. We
were also fortunate enough to acquire a whaleboat from Navy surplus
before
leaving California, probably making the Sundowners the only fighter
squadron
in the world with its 'own' navy. Both the vehicles and the boat were
shipped
to the Philippines courtesy of Samuel Gompers (AD-37). I flew in early
that day to meet Bill Rennie and the other guys. Bill had it ready to
go
girls for show even we went out drinking beer and having a grand old
time
to meet Shang coming into the harbor. CAPT Herbert R. Poorman, the CO
of
the carrier, came up on the 5MC and told me that I would never fly in
early
again he was just kidding of course, as he was a nice guy."
On an other occasion, CDR Dimon had to report to CAPT Poorman's offices
again. "Our boat developed engine problems, so Bill Rennie or one of
the
chiefs sent it to the Subic shipyard for an engine overhaul and upkeep.
About a month later, CAPT Poorman called me in and asked me about
$2,700
billed to the ship for the work done. I smiled and said, 'Hey boss, we
just gave you a new motor whaleboat.' They kept it and used it during
the
rest of the cruise."

Pilots transPac'ing their F-8s from NAS Miramar to Cubi
Point, R.P. From l to r: CDR William B. Rennie (XO); LCDR'SJames
B. Best & Neil Donovan(neeling) LT's Hugh J. Risseeuw, George
Melnyk
& Robert H. Kiral. Photo: courtesy of CDR. Chuck Dimon, USN(Ret)
In the War Zone
After three days in Subic, Shangri-La returned to sea on 8 April
1970
and continued toward Yankee Station. At 0500 on 11 April, flight
quarters
were sounded for the first combat sorties, and Dimon was chosen to lead
the first one.
"It was another Shang disaster," Dimon recalls. "Her call was AllStar
but we would always check in with 'Allstate.' Though this was my fifth
Vietnam cruise, our CAG had only been to 'Nam as air boss - he'd never
flown
while there. So he picked me."
The weather was lousy-fog to deck - and CDR Dimon and his wingman LT
George Melnyk were launched for a weather recce.

CDR. Chuck Dimon CO of the VF-111 Sundowners,
celebrates
his 600th Crusader trap, 23 May '70 on board The USS. Shangri-La
Photo: courtesy of Capt. Charles G. Dimon, USN(Ret)
"I went up into the Gulf and looked around. It was a definite no-go,
and I recommended not to launch. We started returning to the ship when
we heard other aircraft checking in. Things like, 'No targets, dump
ordnance.'
The ship requested I make an approach to see how the weather was, but
it
was all below minimums, and since we had no ACLS, we had to bingo to Da
Nang. The other aircraft-I think they came from Constellation had the
same
problem, and they also had to go for Da Nang. The weather at Da Nang
was
also IFR, so everyone had to make an approach, which meant that there
were
a lot of low fuel state aircraft in the air. One A-3 had a hell of a
time
and flamed out when finally clearing the taxiway."
The landing of Dimon and his wingman at Da Nang also was not without
incident.
"Melnyk had no radio, so he relied upon me. I got him down at Da
Nang-on
our approach I broke out of the goo at about 300 feet, saw I was lined
up slightly off the center, gave him the power signal with a head nod,
eased over the center line, then head-nodded back on power.
"As I touched down, I noticed he passed me and took off again-no radio
and no way to get back on deck. So I put on power again, took off and
joined
him. I took the lead again and got the controllers to sneak us in and
landed
with the low fuel lights-my, oh my-great. That was my first combat leg
from Shang, a remarkable one!"
During the first line period, Shangri-La operated on a flight schedule
that began at noon and lasted until midnight. After a week, this was
changed
to midnight to noon. Whatever the timetable, more than half the flying
was at night and often under adverse weather conditions. During this
period,
11 April until 2 May 1970, the air wing flew recce missions over Laos
and
North Vietnam, giving the Sundowner pilots many escort missions.
However,
the vast majority were BarCAP missions, which proved the trend of the
entire
cruise.

USS. Independance (CVA-62) steams with the Shangri-La
with both flight decks spotted artistically rather than operationally,
1968. Photo: courtesy of USN James R. Szenasy
No-Radio Night Recovery
Flying 12-hour schedules makes night flying a routine, although not
a pleasant one. LT Ken Mattson assigned to the CO as Stinger Two- was
one
of the four new pilots assigned to the Sundowners before the start of
the
cruise, and he had his share of experiences.
"One day I was to be wingman to John L. Black Jack' Finley on a
midnight
or 0200 BarCAP flight. I launched after him, and immediately after the
cat shot, my radio quit working. I turned on the anti-collision light
and
joined up with my leader climbing to 16,000 feet, our squadron safe
altitude.
I hooked up my PRC radio to my earphone, turned to the emergency radio
frequency and talked to Black Jack. He confirmed that my hook was down
then told me to recover in 15 minutes. He proceeded north with the
spare
pilot that had been launched, leaving me alone to make it back to the
boat.
I dumped fuel and went to afterburner to get down below max trap
weight.
I then headed to the initial point [IP] five miles behind the ship at
1,200
feet and started my CCA. I can hear them, but can't answer.
"My first pass didn't work-I can't remember if the deck was fouled
or if I wasn't looking good to the LSO. I returned to the IP to do it
all
over again, and again I did not get aboard. I remember being frustrated
because I was now getting low on fuel and would have to divert to Da
Nang
soon. It was a clear night, and I wasn't going to let the boat get me
in
trouble. After the second pass, rather than clean up the gear and
cruise
back out to the IP, I disconnected my PRC radio from my headset and
climbed
to 400 feet, the daytime pattern altitude, and came around to do what I
did best-get aboard the boat."
As "Rocket 3," Mattson was the junior pilot, which meant that he was
automatically assigned as CDR Dimon's wingman. During the cruise,
Mattson
made 120 traps, 22 of them at night, and logged a total of 260 hours.
He
remembers that the average ready room briefing started one hour before
the scheduled takeoff time, and that every trip was followed by a
30-minute
debrief, depending on the time the LSO needed to make the rounds of
other
ready rooms.

Lt Chuck Scott (left) responds to a comment by flight
leader LCDR James B. "Red" Best prior to a mission over North Vietnam.
Others include LTs George Melnyk (2nd from left) and Randy Anderson.
Photo: courtesy of RADM James Best USN(Ret)
Ramp strike
The air wing lost two A-4s and a VF-162 F-8 in the first line
period, and two of the three pilots involved survived their mishap. The
line period was followed by eight days of R&R at Cubi Point, a
place
to become a familiar sight for the Sundowners. Shangri-La returned to
sea
bound for Yankee Station, where for VF-111 the second line period
operations
were essentially unchanged. There was an increase in the number of Blue
Tree missions, giving the sundowners more escort missions over North
Vietnam.
One of the highlights of this period was the 600th F-8 trap of CDR
Dimon
on 23 May. Upon recovery, he was met by CAPT Poorman at the aircraft
and
later cut a giant cake together with XO Rennie.
Following these festivities, the dangers of carrier aviation became
clear again when CAG hit the ramp on an approach on 28 May. CDR Dimon
remembers
both the accident and the circumstances that led to it.
“CAG did not fly very much. He had not had a night trap for, I think,
more than three months. CAPT Poorman wanted him to fly more, so CAG
came
to me. We set him up with a pinky [early night trap], not forcing him
to
get back aboard the ship in the pitch black. On preflight, however, he
downed the aircraft because of a problem with fuel gauge fluctuation.
"I saw him the next day or even that night and told him that we would
set him up again. He instead wanted to go to VF-162 and they set him up
with a late go. I got a call in my room when he had crashed-he struck
the
ramp on recovery-but was happy to hear that he was OK. Re was very
lucky
to walk away."
The next morning, however, CAG walked into the Sundowners' ready room
without his wings. "We got to the comer and he told me that I was to be
the new CAG until his replacement arrived," Dimon continued. “So I
acted
as CAG until CDR Ed McKellar arrived to relieve me”.
Only days later CDR Dimon was witness to another mishap that seemed
increasingly typical for Shangri-La during its final cruise.
"The ship already had problems from the moment it left Mayport,' he
recalls. For starters, the Tacan was inoperable for the first three or
so months. In fact, young pilots such as Ken Mattson considered the
ship
to be more of a threat to them than the war or the weather. On 30 May,
while moored in Subic Bay after the second line period, CDR Dimon asked
CAPT Poorman whether he would like to fly with him.
"He said 'hell, yes' and we took off to observe the mining of a target
near Cubi. I let him lead for a while and just hung on. The moment we
were
overhead the mining, we were told to come back to Cubi ASAP as the ship
had a problem. Away we went.
It appeared a firemain in the refrigeration area of the ship had
ruptured
and flooded the spaces, causing extensive damage to the refrigeration
units.
CDR Dimon remembers the flight as a short hop for the skipper and an
interesting
one for him: The mining results had been poor and the attack squadrons
flunked ORI!
Trouble Again
After almost two weeks, Shangri-La and CVW-8 set to sea again for the
third line period after two days of carquals in the Philippine
operating
area. In June, Chuck Dimon was relieved by CDR Ed McKeller as CAG,
leaving
Dimon to remove one of the two hats he had been wearing. The third line
period was essentially the same kind of flying, and was to remain so
for
the remainder of the cruise. With no MiGs showing up, the pilots of
VF-111
and VF-162 flew lots of BarCAP and recce escort trips.
Ken Mattson, who started as a WestPac rookie, became more experienced
with every mission, and was soon assigned to fly escort for VFP-63
photo
forays.
"I remember one trip into Laos," Mattson recalls. "We'd normally fly
high cover behind the photo bird to protect his six. During this
mission,
the photo guy had me come down low and took my picture against a
waterfall
in Laos. I had a grand time shooting my guns and so on.
"However, when the skipper saw the resulting photo, I was in deep
trouble."
The third line period proved to be a bad time for the air wings' safety
record. During the first two line periods, CVW-8 already had lost or
damaged
two F-8Hs, one E-1B and three A-4s. During the third period, which
started
on 14 June and ended on 2 July, two more Skyhawks and an E-l suffered
mishaps,
which luckily did not result in all cases in the loss of aircraft or
human
life.
On 2 July bad luck struck Shang again when the carrier suffered a
sheared
shaft coupling on the No. 1 shaft. After a transit to Subic Bay to
remove
the screw, the carrier proceeded to Japan for an extended dry-dock stay
at Yokosuka. The same day Shangri-La left Subic Bay for Japan, CDR
Rennie
relieved CDR Dimon, who had orders for Naval War College. CDR Harlan
Pearl
arrived as the new Sundowners' XO.

Sundowners at ease in their ready room include
(kneeling,
from left)LTJGs Dean Baird, Tom Williams, Ken Mattson; LT Bill Curran.
Standing L to R: LTJG Rick Hadden; LT Jim Kinslow; CDR Chuck Dimon;
LCDR Jack Finley & LTJG Brian Wagner. Photo: courtesy of CAPT.
Charles G. Dimon USN (Ret)
A Good Deal Times Two
Leaving Japan on 23 July, CVA-38 set course for Yankee Station
again,
and the daily schedule returned to the routine of many weeks before.
People
may have thought that Shang was haunted, because only days later, bad
luck
struck again. In the afternoon of 29 July, a fire was reported in the
starboard
steering engine unit. Although it was extinguished quickly, the ship
had
to be steered by engines alone for more than three hours.
On 5 August, the operating periods changed from noon to midnight.
Squadron
operations were generally the same as before, although the weather over
the beach had deteriorated, leaving the pilots almost without any other
missions than normal BarCAPs.
In early September, LTJG Randy Anderson, having just finished RAG,
had orders to report to the Sundowners and travelled to Southeast Asia
together with LTJG Richard F. Burns, who was assigned to the
Sundowner's
sister squadron, VF-162.
'We flew from Travis AFB to Clark AB and then took a Hercules to Da
Nang. As we deplaned and walked across the ramp, there was an air
strike
dropping napalm right off the end of the duty runway.
"I remember turning to Dick saying 'Welcome to the big leagues.' From
Da Nang we took the COD to Shangri-La
." During September, October and November, Anderson flew mostly BarCAP
missions, feet wet, between the ships of the 7th Fleet and the coast of
North Vietnam. "
Occasionally we did escort missions along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in
Laos and into the passes that lead into North Vietnam from Laos. My
first
photo-escort was one to remember. As this was my first trip into North
Vietnam and I had only been out of the U.S. for 30 days, I was somewhat
apprehensive.
"I was escorting a RF-8G, call sign Corktip, flown by-if I am correct-
C.A.
Simpson. We had to make photos of the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos and
through
the Ban Kari Pass into North Vietnam. My job was to fly a tight combat
spread formation about 3 or 4,000 feet abeam Corktip. From that
position
I could warn him of hostile aircraft or AAA, leaving him to concentrate
on his cameras. Now that I think of it, I was checking his six, but
mine
was unprotected....."
Anderson remembers it as an overcast and rainy day, forcing them fly
below the cloud layers as he went into the Ban Kari Pass.
"The clouds came almost down to the walls of the pass on both sides
as we flew through it and rather further into North Vietnam than I
thought
we were supposed to. I felt relieved when the run was over and we
regressed
back into Laos. Only then did I hear C.A. say, 'Whoops, I forgot to
turn
the cameras on, we'll have to do it all over.' I was very green, but
knew
it was a good military principle not to do the same thing twice. But we
did it, including the incursion into North Vietnam. To this day, I
think
C.A. did it over on purpose just to see if I'd go back with him."
R&R in Hong Kong
The fourth line period was followed by some rest and relaxation in
Cubi Point again. For most of the Sundowners, the naval base and its
surroundings
became quite familiar, since one or two aircraft were at Cubi most of
the
time for corrosion control and flight checks, and one, as Ken Mattson
recalls,
was always a hangar queen. Only a few days into the fifth line period,
CAPT Poonnan was relieved as CO of Shang by CAPT Hoyt P. Maulden.
Apart from an A-4 crashing into the sea after a faulty cat shot, this
line period and the next, the fourth and fifth, were uneventful.
Another
highlight, however, was the port visit to Hong Kong, BCC. After one
week
of R&R, the crew was at sea again for Yankee Station for the sixth
and final line period.
Until that moment, most of the squadrons of the air wing had
encountered
their share of mishaps. However, the Sundowners had not been involved
in
anything major. On Halloween 1970, the CO, CDR Bill Rennie, personally
ended this record. Upon return, his Crusader skidded to a stop in the
wires
due to a collapsed nose gear, an accident not unknown to F-8 pilots.
Luckily,
it was only a minor mishap, and was ruled a simple material failure.
At 1800 on 6 November, the final line period ended and Shangri-La
anchored
at Subic Bay. During the cruise, VF-111 had been on Yankee Station for
124 days, had flown 109 combat sorties and 1,191 support sorties.

Sundowners F-8H patrols South Vietnamese skys near DMZ.
Photo: courtesy of RADM James Best USN(Ret)
The officers and men of VF-111 left the carrier and transPac'd back
to Miramar rather than sailing all the way back to Florida. The
transPac
via Guam, Wake and Hawaii was supported by maintenance crews on two
C-118s
and one C-121 The remainder of the unit returned home on a DC-8 and a
C-141.
Although there was some delay due to logistical problems, the trip back
home marked the first time an aviation squadron's entire assets were
flown
from WestPac to the U.S. West Coast. The Sundowners set foot again on
NAS
Miramar on 23 November, thus ending a remarkable cruise.
And on 14 December, three days before Shangri-La returned to NavSta
Mayport from its final cruise, the first pilots of VF-111 were busy
again
and began transition to the F-4B Phantom II.
Acknowledgments: The author wishes to thank former Sundowners
Chuck Dimon, "Red" Best, Ken Mattson and Randy Anderson for their
assistance.
Also a big "thank you" to the other Sundowners involved and Henk van
der
Lugt of the Sundowner Association.
Martin Zijlstra, a 41-year-old major in the Royal Netherlands Air
Force, currently serves as editor of its official monthly, the Flying
Dutchman
magazine. In his spare time, he specializes in researching the history
of Carrier Air Wing Eight. For his next project he would like to get in
touch with any aircrew that sailed with USS Nimitz (CVN-68) on its
Mediterranean/Indian
Ocean cruise of 1979-1980.