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Hawgsmoke 2010
The first of three A-10 Thunderbolt IIs breaks formation before landing at Gowen Field in Boise, Idaho, for the 2010 Hawgsmoke competition. The competiton runs from Oct. 13 to 16. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. John Orrell)
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Hawgsmoke 2010 under way in Idaho

Posted 10/15/2010 Email story   Print story

    


by Tech. Sgt. John Orrell
National Guard Bureau


10/15/2010 - BOISE, Idaho (AFNS) -- Hawgsmoke 2010, the biennial A-10 Thunderbolt II bombing, missile and tactical gunnery competition, has begun.  This year's event, which takes place from Oct. 13 to 16, is being hosted by the Idaho Air National Guard's 190th  Fighter Squadron, the 2008 competition's winning unit.  The competition stages out of Gowen Air National Guard Base in Boise.

The competition is a chance for active duty, Guard and Reserve A-10 pilots and maintenance personnel to get together and share their experiences, said Col. James R. Compton, the commander of the Idaho Air National Guard's 124th Fighter Wing, the parent unit for the 190th FS.

"It's a great honor to host this competition," Colonel Compton said. "These are some of the finest warriors in the A-10 business."

"If you don't put them all together at one time in a venue like this, then you don't get any validation that (the combination) works," he said. "We are a very diverse organization and to put it all together here, we come to find out that we're not as different as we thought. It validates that we are all one team heading for one common goal."

Competition is also good for them, Colonel Compton said, because it builds camaraderie throughout the A-10 community.

"(Camaraderie) is very important to this type of a competition," he said. "(It) is really the glue that keeps us together."

Keeping the planes running during the competition are the maintenance crews from the competing wings.

"Much like the pilots, they are going to share (maintaining) different airplanes," Colonel Compton said. "That validates that we have one standard for the way we generate airplanes, and we get to watch them ... all working together as a team."

Senior Master Sgt. Ron Manker, the maintenance superintendent for Hawgsmoke, said the extra hands from the participating units are very helpful, since repairs had to be made for some teams to compete.

He added that most of them also have deployed or trained together in the past.

Colonel Compton said wing officials have been planning for this event for the last two years.

"The best thing about having this competition in Boise is we are going to see some of the premier bombing ranges," he said. "The pilots are going to be really impressed with the tactical scenarios we provided for them."



tabComments
10/18/2010 1:01:00 AM ET
I am stationed out of Mountain Home AFB. I was at Eielson AFB when the A-10s still called it home. They are by fare the greatest air frame the Air Force has ever requisitioned They are just the best.
TSgt Michael Duell, Kabul AFG
 
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