BILOXI, Miss. -- The Atlantic Hurricane Season is here, and forecasters are predicting it will be one of the most active on record because of climate conditions and abnormally warm ocean temperatures.
“There goes my summer,” says First Lt. Zach McDermott, a pilot with the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron, part of the 403rd Wing, Air Force Reserve Command at Keesler Air Force Base, Miss.
The squad is known as the Hurricane Hunters, and they’re bracing for a busy tropical season. On a late May afternoon, 6 airmen are gathered around a conference table at their headquarters, looking over conditions for the day ahead of a training flight.
“I was thinking at some point today we run through the invest checklist [to] get ready since storm season is a week away,” McDermott says during the pre-flight briefing.
This is the only U.S. military unit tasked to collect real-time information for hurricane forecasters. They fly over, around, and through dangerous storms, piercing the eyewall as the propeller aircraft is pelted by hail and at times, winds topping 150 miles-an-hour.
“There's the cliché it’s like a roller coaster in a car wash,” says Lt. Col. Steven Burton, deputy operations commander with the Hurricane Hunters.
"A lot of times it's not that bad, but you get those once every now and then and makes you question your life's choices where it's violently shaking and there's hail hitting the windows and it's loud and the pilots are doing everything they can to maintain control of the airplane," says Burton, who has been with the Hurricane Hunters for about ten years.
The squad’s roots date back to a hurricane in Texas in 1943.
“It was a bar bet,” Burton says. “’I bet you can't go fly that hurricane out there.’”
A pilot took the bet, and the Hurricane Hunters were born.
Hurricane Hunters fly WC-130J Super Hercules aircraft – basically a military cargo plane fitted with weather data-gathering equipment and the ability to deploy instruments including weather buoys.
On this training flight over the Gulf of Mexico, the crew practices what they would do during a hurricane run, what airmen call a sortie.
The weather officer alerts the cockpit the gear is ready to deploy.
“Hey pilot, weather,” calls 1st Lt. Mark McCoy through the aircraft’s headset communication system. “Still good to drop at 8?”
“You’re clear on the left, clear on the right,” the pilot responds.
On McCoy’s order, Staff Sergeant Donny Arseneaux, the load master on the flight, deploys a device called adropsonde through the belly of the plane. It’s a compact weather station that looks like a cardboard paper towel roll with a tiny parachute attached.
“Every quarter second we get a tick of data back,” Arseneaux says.
As it falls to the surface of the water, the dropsonde measures temperature, humidity, and atmospheric pressure.
“Using the GPS location, we can track where it moves in the hurricane,” says Arseneaux. “That gives us wind speed and direction.”
Arseneaux feeds all that data to weather officer McCoy, who compiles the readings to send to the National Hurricane Center. It only takes about ten seconds.
“All that most up-to-date information on what's going on in the storm system is critical for them to be able to find out how to forecast where the hurricane's going,” McCoy says. “Is it intensifying or is it weakening? Just all the internal structures of what's going on in the storm.”
McCoy says that allows forecasters to better predict a hurricane's threats ahead of landfall – the kind of information that can help determine what communities to evacuate and when, and where to stage emergency crews and relief supplies.
“I think this is a combat mission. We are protecting our coastline from these storms,” says Col. William Magee, maintenance group commander for the Air Force’s 403rd wing. He oversees the mechanics who keep the Hurricane Hunter fleet up and running. It’s a tall task given they have the same ten airplanes that were assigned to the group in 1996.
Since, their mission has expanded. They track tropical systems in the Atlantic and Pacific. Then a few years ago they were tasked with a winter season, flying into Northeast storms, and the Atmospheric Rivers that hit the West Coast. So, the Hurricane Hunters' flying season has gone from about half a year to ten months.
“So our personnel get spread very thin,” he says. “Our aircraft get spread very thin.”
Magee says since 2018, they’ve seen a six-fold increase in demand for winter weather reconnaissance missions, and about a 20% uptick in tropical storm reconnaissance. Yet they’re working with the same number of aircraft and personnel – 20 5-person aircrews, about half of them part-time Air Force Reservists.
Magee says adding winter flights takes a toll.
“In years past, that was the time in which we recovered. We recovered our airplanes. We came home and saw our families,” says Magee. “So we're in a deployed status almost all the time. That's wear and tear on this unit.”
That means tough choices. “A dance,” Magee calls it. For instance, at one point last year there were two hurricanes but they could only fly into one, he says, while waiting on repair parts.
Hurricane Hunter commanders are making their case to Air Force leaders and Congress that they need additional resources. That’s welcome news to the crew on this training flight.
Pilot Zach McDermott says there’s a cumulative effect from trying to respond to everything they’re tasked to cover when mother nature doesn’t let up.
“There's no downtime and there's not an extensive amount of time for training like we did tonight, because we're constantly flying these tasked missions,” McDermott says. “More people and more airplanes could help spread out that that workload that we have.”
The Hurricane Hunters are unique, says Commander Magee, and need some relief.
“There's one Hurricane Hunter unit and we're it,” says Commander Magee. "And so, if not us, then who? There is no one else."
It's a mission Magee says they take seriously because lives are saved with more accurate forecasts.
The Atlantic Hurricane Season runs from June through November 30th. The winter storm period starts November first and lasts until the end of March.
Transcript
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
The Atlantic hurricane season is here. Climate change and warm oceans have led forecasters to predict one of the most active seasons on record, which means extra work for the Air Force weather reconnaissance unit, known as the Hurricane Hunters. NPR's Debbie Elliott met some of them.
DEBBIE ELLIOTT, BYLINE: Six airmen are gathered around a conference table at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Miss., looking at conditions for the day.
ZACH MCDERMOTT: We are T-O nine seven today. Weather line. We're on double O spot 15.
ELLIOTT: First Lt. Zach McDermott, the pilot, is briefing the crew before a Hurricane Hunter training flight over the Gulf of Mexico.
MCDERMOTT: I was thinking at some point today we run through the invest checklist - get ready, since storm season's a week away.
ELLIOTT: The 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron is the only U.S. military unit tasked to collect real-time information for hurricane forecasters. They fly over, around and through dangerous storms, piercing the eyewall as the propeller aircraft are pelted at times by hail and winds topping 150 miles an hour.
STEVEN BURTON: There's a cliche - it's like a roller coaster in a car wash.
ELLIOTT: That's Lt. Col. Steven Burton, deputy operations commander with the Hurricane Hunters. He says the squad's roots date back to 1943.
BURTON: It was a bar bet. They were in Corpus Christi. He said, bet you can't go fly through that hurricane out there.
ELLIOTT: A pilot took the bet, and the Hurricane Hunters were born.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: About 115 miles south of Mobile over the Gulf right now.
ELLIOTT: Hurricane Hunters fly C-130 Super Hercules - basically, a military cargo plane fitted with weather equipment and the ability to deploy instruments, including weather buoys and something called a dropsonde.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: Hey, pilot. Weather.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #3: Yep.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: We're still good a drop at eight?
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #3: You're clear on the left, clear on the right.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: On your call, weather.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #3: All right, go release sonde now.
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: Sonde away.
ELLIOTT: Staff Sgt. Donny Arseneaux, the loadmaster on the flight, deployed the dropsonde through the belly of the plane. It's a compact weather station that looks like a paper towel roll with a tiny parachute attached.
DONNY ARSENEAUX: Every quarter-second, we get a tick of data back. That data consists of the temperature, humidity and GPS location. Using the GPS location, we can track where it moves in the hurricane.
ELLIOTT: It measures wind speed and direction and atmospheric pressure. First Lt. Mark McCoy, the weather officer on board, sends the readings within 10 seconds to the National Hurricane Center so forecasters can better predict a storm's threats ahead of landfall.
MARK MCCOY: All that most up to date information on what's going on in the storm system is critical for them to be able to find out how to forecast where the hurricane's going. Is it intensifying or is it weakening?
ELLIOTT: Information used to determine what communities to evacuate and when and where to stage emergency crews and relief supplies.
WILLIAM MAGEE: I think of this as a combat mission. We are protecting our coastline from these storms.
ELLIOTT: Col. William Magee is the maintenance group commander who oversees the mechanics who keep the Hurricane Hunter fleet up and running - a tall task, given they have the same 10 planes assigned to the group back in 1996. Since, their mission has expanded. They track tropical systems in the Atlantic and Pacific. Then a few years ago, they were tasked with a winter season, flying in Northeast storms and the atmospheric rivers that hit the West Coast.
MAGEE: In years past, that was the time in which we recovered. We recovered our airplanes. We came home and saw our families. But now, instead of flying about half the year, we fly about 10 months out of the year. And so we're in a deployed status almost all the time. That's wear and tear on this unit.
ELLIOTT: Magee says, since 2018, they've seen a sixfold increase in demand for winter reconnaissance missions and a 20% uptick in tropical flights. Yet the Hurricane Hunters are working with the same number of planes and crew. That means tough choices. For instance, at one point last year, there were two hurricanes, but they could only fly into one, Magee says, while they waited on repair parts.
Hurricane Hunter commanders are making their case to Congress that they need additional resources. That's welcome news to the crew on this training flight. Pilot Zach McDermott says there's a cumulative impact from responding to everything they're tasked to cover when Mother Nature doesn't let up.
MCDERMOTT: There's no downtime and there's no - there's not an extensive amount of time for training like we did tonight because we're constantly flying these task missions. More people and more airplanes could help, you know, spread out that workload that we have.
ELLIOTT: The Hurricane Hunters are unique, says Cmdr. Magee, and need some relief.
MAGEE: There's a lot of combat units out there. There's one Hurricane Hunter unit, and we're it. And so if not us, then who? Well, there is no one else.
ELLIOTT: A mission Magee says they take seriously because lives are saved with more accurate hurricane forecasts.
Debbie Elliott, NPR News, Biloxi, Miss. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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