CANNON
AIR FORCE BASE, N.M., Aug.
2010 – While many
daughters may share similar
interests with their
fathers, one noncommissioned
officer here relates the
challenges of her job with
an understanding dad. He's
been there and done that.
|

Then-Air
Force Tech.
Sgt.
Jennifer
Seibt, and
her father,
retired
Coast Guard
Chief
Warrant
Officer 3
William
Seibt, stand
in front of
an MC-130W
Dragon Spear
at Cannon
Air Force
Base, N.M.,
July 30,
2010.
Sergeant
Seibt has
been a
loadmaster
for the
venerable
airframe for
seven years.
Her father,
who came for
his
daughter's
promotion to
master
sergeant
later that
day, is a
former
avionics
officer and
navigator
for C-130
aircraft.
U.S. Air
Force photo
by Greg
Allen
(Click photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
|
|
When retired Coast Guard
Chief Warrant Officer 3
William Seibt learned that
his daughter, Jennifer, was
going to be promoted from
technical sergeant to master
sergeant July 30, he made
the trip here from
Hillsboro, Ore., to share
the event with her. As a
retired avionics officer for
a Coast Guard C-130, he got
the opportunity to revisit
his old airframe, albeit a
73rd Special Operations
Squadron MC-130W Dragon
Spear, courtesy of his
loadmaster daughter.
"We
had a different philosophy
in the Coast Guard," he
said as he looked at the
electronic panels of the
aircraft. "I fixed the
equipment on the ground and
was a navigator in the
air."
He
recognized most of the
electronic panels as if 20
years had not passed since
he retired, pointing his
finger at various
components. "That's the
same, and that's the same,
but over there, that's
different," he said. He
then tapped the frame
holding the electronic
components and said,
"This used to be all
mine."
After
he had satisfied himself
with a personal
self-inspection, his
daughter steered him through
the rest of the aircraft,
explaining its various
configurations and
capabilities. When she
approached the back of the
plane, she waved her hand
over the neatly stacked
pallets of equipment and
announced, "This is all
mine."
Sergeant
Seibt grew up in a military
environment. She was with
her dad as he served three
tours in Alaska: two in
Kodiak, and one in Sitka.
She lived in Astoria, Ore.,
and Elizabeth City, N.C.
When her time came to serve,
she joined the Air Force.
Initially she worked in
vehicle operations at
Ramstein Air Base, Germany,
but has been a loadmaster
for the last seven years.
"When
I was at Ramstein in vehicle
ops, I was told that my
personality might be better
suited for that of a
loadmaster," she said.
"I took this as an
incentive to crosstrain. I'm
glad I did."
She
said that perhaps the family
tie to flying in airplanes
was genetic. Her grandfather
was a member of one of the
first Army Air Forces units
that became today's Air
Force.
"He
would tell me the stories
about when he was a
loadmaster during the Berlin
Blockade," she said.
Although
the two served in different
services, their common bond
with the venerable C-130
airframe has made their
personal relationship grow
stronger over the years, the
Seibts said.