NAVY GRADUATE EARNS WINGS
MILESTONE TICKED FOR NAVY PILOT Thereâs pride, thereâs excitement and thereâs an entire future to look forward to. But most of all, itâs a massive relief to graduate, says our newest Navy pilot. Ensign Andre Debenham, 22, from Christchurch, was awarded his pilotâs brevet at the graduation of the 20/01 âWingsâ Course at Ohakea last month. He was among eight pilots graduating, including five Air Force and two Royal Australian Navy pilots, from the Flying Training Wing at Ohakea. âIt was a long 18 months,â says ENS Debenham, âand itâs a massive relief at the end of it. It was definitely one of the hardest things Iâve ever done â although I feel like anything I do from now is probably going to be the hardest thing Iâve done.â
Heâs earned his brevet on the T-6C Texan II fixed-wing trainer, operated by No. 14 Squadron. The ultimate destination for a Navy pilot is the Seasprite SH-2G(I) helicopter, operated by No. 6 Squadron in Whenuapai, so his next step is the six-month conversion course to rotary flight, on the Air Forceâs A109. ENS Debenham says he has always aspired to be a military pilot since he was young, when his late grandfather took him to air shows at the nowretired Wigram Air Force Base. He studied engineering at the University of Canterbury in 2018 before being accepted as a pilot. âI applied for both Navy and Air Force. I was really keen to fly helicopters and I was open to either option. I got the job offer from the Navy and thought, letâs go.â Prior to the âWingsâ course, ENS Debenham undertook the 22-week Junior Officer Common Training (JOCT) course in Auckland. âI did JOCT 19/02, just before the lockdowns. It was a real eye-opener into Navy culture and a great experience to be trained in Navy leadership.â
He says the âWingsâ course is tough. âYouâre going to struggle at some point â we all struggled at different bits, but we all had each otherâs backs, and we helped out as much as possible. Camaraderie is really strong.â His training has to take a short pause as he takes his turn with Operation Protect, the NZDFâs support to the Managed Isolation Facilities in New Zealand. Heâs now doing a sixweek rotation as a Managed Isolation Facility assistant at the M Social hotel in Auckland. âThereâs a while to go, but Iâm looking forward to getting out on operations with No. 6 Squadron. It will be really cool.â If he was to give a pep talk at his old school, Cashmere High, he would tell people itâs challenging. âYou might think, you arenât good enough. But if you want it enough, do your research and give it 100 per cent. Itâs worked for me so far.â
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