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-   -   UN Helicopters (https://www.pprune.org/rotorheads/310420-un-helicopters.html)

Bravo73 4th Feb 2008 17:00

I heard that you get lots and lots of Puma time on those 3 month Sudan contracts.

And plenty of NVG time too, apparently.

freerideroj2 4th Feb 2008 17:08

Sorry, just for pilot or would he possibly have an idea on rear crew?

freerideroj2 4th Feb 2008 17:10

Or any rear crew? anywhere? (nervous humph)

Bravo 99 5th Feb 2008 11:09

Helogs operation was for Aircrew and paramedics, engineers where usually french other than that the crew did a lot of the humping ( materials and plant only chaps) when on the ground.
flight time per tour averaged about 70 to 100 hours per tour

I hope this helps.

Sincerely
B 99

freerideroj2 5th Feb 2008 12:10

It does, cheers.

Longdog 6th Feb 2008 22:38

I beleive Gulf Helicopters, out of Doha Qatar, still does UN work in Sudan.
Not the best paid, but not the worst.

No-ID 6th Oct 2008 05:36

Anyone worked for UN/a NGO lately? I am still interested in requirements/contacts for flying in Africa...

Thanks!

unstable load 6th Oct 2008 08:14

I can only echo what has been said before, sadly. The UN has it's heart in the right place, but it all falls flat with the application. They have created such a complex bureaucracy that they need more people to oversee the operations than are on the ground, while the ones on the ground are too busy posturing and sniffing bums to see who is the bigger dog on the street to get anything worthwhile done.

We flew a 61 in Mozambique from Nampula to Pemba with a bunch of UN staff so we could have a day at the beach and took along a few bags of maize meal and other dry rations that were on order for there so we could justify the trip.

About the only meaningful thing I was part of there was on polling day when we moved ballot boxes and observers around and the de-mining work we were assigned to. The rest was a shambles of Monty Python proportions with people who were sometimes barely qualified to walk upright trying to put together million dollar missions and then going to meetings to try and figure out why it all fell over so soon.

Ditto the Cote d' Ivoire mission where it was worse in some ways as aircrew.

Both Moz and CI missions involved us doing medevacs and with the exception of illnesses like Malaria and the occasional heart attack most were UN vehicle accidents with drivers who should never have been allowed to push a wheelbarrow around a level parking lot, let alone drive a Land Rover in the hills during the rainy season, or in a town with demarkated lanes and traffic rules.

Still, it paid well...........................:E

the delaminator 11th Oct 2008 02:37

Aww ya did not. I was there and you.................wait a minute....were you the guy in the love seat dodging tracer rounds?

Oohhhh yaaaaaaaa.:}


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