News>Air Guard helps grant 'Bucket List' wish for ailing senior
Photos
Lt. Col. Scott Reinhold and Wil Englund, a hospice patient from Phoenix, watch F-16 Fighting Falcons taxi by on the 162nd Fighter Wing flightline at Tucson International Airport, May 17. Reinhold worked with the Phoenix-based Bucket List Foundation to help give Englund a ‘pilot for a day’ experience. (U.S. Air Force photo/Maj. Gabe Johnson)
Kimberly Iverson, founder of the Bucket List Foundation, and Wil Englund watch F-16 Fighting Falcons from the 162nd Fighter Wing take off from the Tucson International Airport runway, May 17. (U.S. Air Force photo/Maj. Gabe Johnson)
by Maj. Gabe Johnson
162nd Fighter Wing Public Affairs
5/17/2012 - TUCSON, Ariz. -- Dreams of blasting off the tarmac in a fighter jet don't fade with age as one Arizona senior taught Airmen here May 17.
When approached by the Bucket List Foundation, a non-profit much like the Make a Wish Foundation or Dream Factory, Wil Englund asked if he could fly an F-16 Fighting Falcon.
"Our goal is to grant wishes to terminally ill seniors," said Kimberly Iverson, Bucket List founder and hospice nurse in Phoenix. "I want to give back more to our senior community, so we try to empower social workers and hospice nurses to ask the question, 'Is there anything you wanted to do during your life but didn't get the chance to do?'"
Englund, a hospice patient from Phoenix, never forgot about his dream as a young man to fly with the U.S. Army Air Corps. Poor color vision kept him out of the cockpit at the time, so instead he enlisted in the Army in the mid-1940s and served with occupying forces in Japan after World War II.
Iverson didn't think an F-16 ride was outside the realm of possibility. She called around until she found Lt. Col. Scott Reinhold, an F-16 instructor pilot at Tucson's 162nd Fighter Wing, who offered a simulator flight and an up-close look at the unit's fleet.
More than 65 years later, a trip to Tucson International Airport would get Englund as close to an after burner take off as possible.
"Unfortunately, we couldn't get Wil into the simulator cockpit once he was here," said Reinhold. Despite concerted efforts by several Bucket List volunteers to assist Englund into the seat, the physical limitations were too great to overcome.
Unfazed by the disappointment, Englund enthusiastically agreed to watch the wing's F-16s take off from just a few hundred feet from the runway.
"It's fantastic," Englund said.
"This gentleman is amazing," said Iverson. "He's been so gracious and humble throughout this entire experience. He's grateful for everything people do for him and the Air Guard has been great. I look at what you guys are doing and it's amazing. The base is immaculate. Everyone has been kind and respectful. I feel really honored to be here and I want to thank the 162nd Fighter Wing for helping us with our cause."
Comments
5/22/2012 5:35:13 PM ET Thank you to all who helped make my father's wish come true. I know he had a wonderful time and is grateful for everyone's generosity and support. What a remarkable feat of cooperation and affirmation of what makes the spirit soar.
Lynn Englund, Saint Paul Minnesota
5/18/2012 12:25:34 AM ET What a grand idea and effort Thanks to the organization and volunteers that made this mans wish come true as much as it was humanly possible.
Nancy, MesaAZ
5/17/2012 10:21:36 PM ET As a retire memember of the 148 FS glad to know the 162 FW still giving back to the community and fellow VETS