Post by Dave Homewood on Jul 17, 2022 23:53:17 GMT 12
Following a two month break, the Wings Over New Zealand Show is back, with Episode 260 - Dave Cohu.
Dave Cohu became a fighter pilot during WWII, training on Tiger Moths, Harvards, P-40’s and eventually posted to No. 17 Squadron on Corsairs in 1944. He served in the Pacific, based at Torokina in Bougainville on his first tour, and then Green Island on his second tour, and his last wartime tour was at Los Negros.
After the war he took a break from the Air Force and grew strawberries, but he returned in 1947, and he was posted to Japan to fly Corsairs on No. 14 (Occupational) Squadron’s last tour there.
On returning to New Zealand he flew Airspeed Oxfords with No 14 Squadron, and one job he got was aerial photography work all round the country, with navigator Colin Hanson.
He was then posted to No. 75 Squadron, where he flew de Havilland Mosquitoes, including to Fiji.
With his time up in the RNZAF, Dave then took a job as a topdressing pilot. He would go onto to become one of New Zealand’s most notable topdressing pilots with a career that spanned four decades. He flew Tiger Moths, Cessna 180’s, Fletchers, Beavers, Airtruks, Agwagons and Snows over his career, and had a few accidents and incidents along the way.
Dave passed away on the 17th of July 2018.
cambridgeairforce.org.nz/WONZShow/2022/07/wonz-260-dave-cohu/
Above: A photo from the 2016 No. 75 Squadron Reunion. Left at the table in the foreground is Dave Cohu, centre is his good mate Rod Dahlberg, and right is fellow Mosquito pilot Dave Phillips. (Photo Dave Homewood)
Dave Cohu became a fighter pilot during WWII, training on Tiger Moths, Harvards, P-40’s and eventually posted to No. 17 Squadron on Corsairs in 1944. He served in the Pacific, based at Torokina in Bougainville on his first tour, and then Green Island on his second tour, and his last wartime tour was at Los Negros.
After the war he took a break from the Air Force and grew strawberries, but he returned in 1947, and he was posted to Japan to fly Corsairs on No. 14 (Occupational) Squadron’s last tour there.
On returning to New Zealand he flew Airspeed Oxfords with No 14 Squadron, and one job he got was aerial photography work all round the country, with navigator Colin Hanson.
He was then posted to No. 75 Squadron, where he flew de Havilland Mosquitoes, including to Fiji.
With his time up in the RNZAF, Dave then took a job as a topdressing pilot. He would go onto to become one of New Zealand’s most notable topdressing pilots with a career that spanned four decades. He flew Tiger Moths, Cessna 180’s, Fletchers, Beavers, Airtruks, Agwagons and Snows over his career, and had a few accidents and incidents along the way.
Dave passed away on the 17th of July 2018.
cambridgeairforce.org.nz/WONZShow/2022/07/wonz-260-dave-cohu/
Above: A photo from the 2016 No. 75 Squadron Reunion. Left at the table in the foreground is Dave Cohu, centre is his good mate Rod Dahlberg, and right is fellow Mosquito pilot Dave Phillips. (Photo Dave Homewood)