The female pilots of
Vietnam
Female pilot Nguyen Kim Chau in the cockpit of an Airbus
A330
Female pilots of the national flag carrier Vietnam
Airlines are often nicknamed 'the long-legged' as they look like beauty queens
or fashion models thanks to their good appearance.
Besides hiring a large
team of foreign pilots, the flag carrier now has 558 Vietnamese male aviators
and eight Vietnamese female pilots.
The 'long-legged' are under
30 years old. After each flight, some passengers linger to request the women to
pose with them for pictures, or ask for their phone numbers for 'convenient
contacts later'.
Other passengers even sent messages of gratitude via air
hostesses to pilots after they learned that they had female pilots on the
flight, said Nguyen Ly Huong, who is a pilot trainer for the twin-engine
turboprop short-haul aircraft ATR-72 and is going to take over the post of chief
pilot.
Now, Vietnam has no woman acting as a chief pilot.
Huong,
deputy chief pilot of Cambodia Angkor Air - a joint venture of Vietnam Airlines
in Cambodia - has over 2,500 hours of flight time with ATR-72. It is the longest
time among Vietnamese female pilots.
"To fly four trips with total time of
four hours, a pilot spends 11-12 hours making preparations," Huong said, adding
that it is not including possible problems such as bad weather, technical
problems, and troubles from passengers.
'Models' in the air
Huong
said she and her teammate Nguyen Thi Thanh Thuy, started working for Vietnam
Airlines in 2009 and were the first female pilots of the airline. Thuy is now
the deputy chief pilot of Airbus A321 at Vietnam Airlines.
Then, many people curiously
looked back at her on seeing she was wearing the pilot uniform, Huong
recalled.
Years having passed by, the
curiosity from clients has gone down because of the increasing appearances of
Vietnamese female pilots on flights and in airports.
"It is our pride to work
for the national air carrier. We are proud to introduce ourselves as pilots of
Vietnam," said female pilot Dong Phuong.
Aside from learning technical
terms to operate a plane, female pilots do more than that since "we learn from
one another how to use make-up to become more beautiful and polite looking,"
said a female pilot.
'This profession
chooses me'
An interesting detail is that
most women come to this job by chance, not from a previously planned
intention.
Huong, who is working for
Cambodia Angkor Air, said she graduated from the urban traffic planning and
management faculty of Transport University in 2005. On preparing to go to work,
she realized that she met standards for a pilot and just tried it.
Nguyen Kim Chau, who has over
1,500 hours of flight time and started flying for Vietnam Airlines with ATR-72
aircraft when she was 21 years old, admitted that most female pilots of the
carrier were working in other jobs of other professions before selecting flight
operation by chance.
Chau, 25, is the youngest female pilot of Vietnam
Airlines. Last year, she finished learning to switch from flying an Airbus A321
to an A330.
In 2008, the woman who stands
at 1.65m tall was preparing for an overseas study trip in the U.S. and happened
to know that Vietnam Airlines was recruiting women to train as pilots.
"I
applied because I don't like paper work," she said, adding that she prefers
changes and that she tailors her hair style every two months to be
'cheery'.
Another female pilot is Tran Trang Nhung, who said she had never
imagined to work as a pilot for an Airbus A330. In 2007, she was admitted to the
information technology faculty of the Ho Chi Minh City University of
Technology.
Once, she entered the website
of Vietnam Airlines to book tickets for her family and knew that it was
recruiting pilots.
She tried it and passed an
entrance exam for trainee pilots. "This profession chooses me," she
added.
Dong Phuong, who has Vietnamese parents but was born in Belgium, is a
special case. When she realized her passion for flying, she was still in high
school. She even applied for training as combat pilot for Belgium Air Force but
failed.
She confessed that she only
studied business to satisfy her father's dream. But later, she dropped the
business curriculum and switched to learn flying.
Female pilot Nguyen Thi Thanh
Thuy revealed that a pilot flies on average 90 hours a month.
According to
the Flight Crew Division 919 based on Hong Ha Street in Ho Chi Minh City, it
costs VND3 billion (US$144,000) to train a female pilot.
Vietnam Airlines now
has 760 pilots, including more than 350 foreign aviators.
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