RWS 45 – Rosemary Arnold – First Australian Female Helicopter Pilot – Part 2

Rosemary Arnold sporting a pink flight suit in a Hughes 500
Rosemary Arnold sporting a pink flight suit in a Hughes 500

In 1965 Rosemary Arnold became the first Australian female helicopter pilot, the first female helicopter pilot in the southern hemisphere and Whirly Girl No.99 In this episode listen in as Rosemary tells the story of her 50yr+ career in aviation.

You can find Part 1 of this episode here.

In Part Two we continue to follow Rosemary’s career through all the way into her eighties where she is still very much involved in aviation as an author and marriage celebrant performing helicopter weddings over Sydney Harbour.

There is also some life advice tucked in there at the end for anyone feeling the crunch from the current oil and gas downturn or having difficulty cracking that next flying gig.

[Tweet “Keep your standards high – you are only competing against yourself.”]

Rosemary Arnold with Australian Astronaut Andy Thomas
Rosemary Arnold with Australian Astronaut Andy Thomas

Podcast: Subscribe in iTunes | Play in new window | Download

In this week’s episode:
02:10 Campaigning for public use helipads – creation of Helicopter Association of Australia (HAA)
05:38 First Australian helicopter airshow 1977
06:20 First public helipad in Sydney at Piermont wharf
09:30 Gas pipeline inspections in a Hiller 12E using street directory
12:30 Intercepted by army helicopters
14:20 Running takeoff to get out of pad
15:30 Adventures in Indonesia
21:00 First Officer gig on DC-3
22:30 Tour leader Oshkosh airshow
24:20 Sold car and boat then went into debt to finance Bell 47
25:30 Job offer in US and down to last 90c and hunger pangs
29:30 Setup own company in the US
34:19 Helicopter weddings over Sydney Harbor
39:35 World’s longest blind date
42:01 Aviation degree at age 70 then lecturing a week later – Aviation History
45:50 First females above Australia encouragement awards
48:40 Mixing with aviation students starting their careers
52:30 What happened to original Bell-47
54:00 ‘Think Aviation’ book – careers in aviation other than pilot
59:40 Episode Sponsors trainmorepilots.com – Facebook advertising tip

Links from this week’s episode:
Rosemary’s Website
World Helicopter Day – can you help out as a volunteer?

[Tweet “#Helicopters would deafen the Koalas – reasons for not allowing #Sydney helipads”]

[Tweet “#Helicopters would blow the leaves off the trees – reasons for not allowing #Sydney helipads”]

Rosemary-Arnold_bell47J-helicopter
Rosemary flying her Bell 47J – 1 seat in front and 3 across the back bench seat

Be part of the conversation on this interview by leaving a comment below.

RWS 44 – Rosemary Arnold – First Australian Female Helicopter Pilot – Part 1

Rosemary Arnold was the first and then only woman helicopter pilot in Australia for 12 years.
Rosemary Arnold was the first and then only woman helicopter pilot in Australia for 12 years.

In 1965 Rosemary Arnold became the first Australian female helicopter pilot, the first female helicopter pilot in the southern hemisphere and Whirly Girl No.99 In this episode listen in as Rosemary tells the story of her 50yr+ career in aviation.

It is a career full of firsts – as well as the above, Rosemary was the first Australian woman to own her own helicopter charter company, be appointed a Chief Pilot, perform a helicopter air-display and be a consultant to rescue helicopter committees.

Rosemary also founded the Helicopter Association of Australia and organised the first helicopter airshow in Australia.

At age 70 she completed a Bachelor of Aviation and the next week was back at the university as a lecturer in Aviation History.

In 2012 Rosemary was awarded the Nancy-Bird Walton Memorial Trophy “for the woman who has achieved the most noteworthy contribution to aviation in Australasia”.

As you’ll hear in this interview – at almost every step of her career Rosemary had to overcome challenges and obstacles in her path. It is a story and example of incredible resilience and self belief.

Now 80-something years young, she is still full of life and operates her marriage celebrant business offering couples the chance to tie the knot in a helicopter over Sydney Harbor Bridge. Rosemary has authored several books about her career and pioneering Australian female aviators.

[Tweet “I didn’t know women could fly and especially someone that was a mother”]

Rosemary in a Hughes 500 during a trip across the US
Rosemary in a Hughes 500 during a trip across the US

Podcast: Subscribe in iTunes | Play in new window | Download

In this week’s episode:
01:00 Helicopter Easter Egg Drops
01:50 World Helicopter Day 2016 – can you help?
03:11 Listener mailbag
05:10 Case of mistaken identity
05:50 Rosemary Arnold – first Australian female helicopter pilot
08:00 First flying experience in a Sunderland flying boat – Gordon Peter Taylor
12:30 Taking flying lessons (fixed wing)- in secret
15:10 My god a woman pilot we’ll all be killed
16:00 Bell 47 J2A – hot pink uniform and floral paint scheme ‘Triple Happy Helicopter’
19:50 Following of joy ride passengers
21:00 Taking helicopter lessons – Licence no. 10
26:40 Media coverage and Whirly Girls
29:25 First commercial Hughes 500 helicopters and trip across USA
32:51 Gas turbine course
34:10 Denied endorsements by DAA (early version of CASA)
35:40 Solo’ing in the Bell 47 and CoG issues solved by carrying dog
38:35 Challenging weather and getting over the range
41:10 Hovering waiting for storm to pass
44:40 Other pilots and meteorologist backed up in court
47:50 Episode Sponsors trainmorepilots.com

Links from this week’s episode:
Rosemary’s Website
World Helicopter Day – can you help out as a volunteer?

[Tweet “276 passengers in one day at the Dubbo airshow – 4 seat Bell 47”]

[Tweet “So stressful that I landed at 7:30am and asked the mechanic for a Scotch”]

Rosemary and daughters who acted as her ground crew in front of Bell 47 VH-THH with its floral paint scheme.
Rosemary and daughters who acted as her ground crew in front of Bell 47 VH-THH with its floral paint scheme.

Be part of the conversation on this interview by leaving a comment below.