Chalked Up His 1,000th Trap Aboard USS Ronald Reagan
The deputy commander of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 14 reached a
major naval aviation milestone April 18 on board the aircraft
carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76). Capt. Kevin "Nix" Mannix
tallied his 1,000th arrested landing with the trap of his F/A-18F
Super Hornet from the "Black Knights" of Strike Fighter Squadron
(VFA) 154 on the flight deck of the Ronald Reagan.
Capt. Mannix 1,000th Trap
"One thousand traps is a milestone in naval aviation," Mannix
said. "It just shows I've been around naval aviation a long time.
Naval aviation is an unforgiving environment that demands your best
every day."
Mannix joins the ranks of the '1,000 Trap Club', and his name
will appear on a special plaque at the Naval Aviation Museum in
Pensacola, Fla., where those who have reached this significant
accomplishment are honored. "Today's milestone is a tribute to his
airmanship and professionalism," said Capt. Hamlin Ortiz-Marty,
Commander, Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 14. "He's achieved a goal that
others can only dream of reaching in today's Navy."
Mannix attributed his career achievement to the hard work of the
Sailors who helped him over the years. "There is nothing but
professionals in this line of work," Mannix said. "The men and
women on the flight deck, the maintainers, I've worked with nothing
but absolute professionals."
Mannix said he has come a long way since his first arrested
landing Dec. 6, 1987, on board USS Lexington (CV 16). "It's so
surreal," Mannix said. "It seems like just yesterday I started this
adventure in naval aviation. I love what I do."
The squadrons of CVW 14 include the "Black Knights" of VFA 154,
the "Argonauts" of VFA-147, the "Blue Diamonds" of VFA-146, the
"Death Rattlers" of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 323, the
"Black Eagles" of Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 113, the
"Cougars" of Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron (VAQ) 139, the
"Providers" of Carrier Logistics Support Squadron (VRC) 30 and the
"Black Knights" of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron (HS) 4.
Ronald Reagan departed from its homeport in San Diego Feb. 2,
for a training exercise and its deployment to the 7th Fleet area of
responsibility. Ronald Regan's last deployment to 7th Fleet was in
2009.
ANN Salutes Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Josh
Cassatt, USS Ronald Reagan Public Affairs.