Flight For Life

Flight For Life Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Flight For Life, Emergency rescue service, 345 Hicks Road, Coward, SC.

Flight for Life's mission is to provide air and ground rescue and emergency services to communities isolated by flooding or infrastructure damage in the wake of natural or man-made disasters.

We’re back in the skies of Western North Carolina! After the challenges and recovery following Hurricane Helene last yea...
10/31/2025

We’re back in the skies of Western North Carolina! After the challenges and recovery following Hurricane Helene last year, today felt extra meaningful as Flight for Life returned for a special Mountain Tour with Ashley and Corey Blaske. It was the perfect day to rediscover these breathtaking autumn colors and remember just how beautiful and resilient our mountains — and our community — truly are. Here’s to new adventures, healing, and unforgettable views. 🍁🚁

10/06/2025

Flight For Life is considering a Golf Ball drop fundraiser.

Each ball cost $20.00
Hole in one wins 2,000.00
If no one goes in, closet to hole wins 1,500.00

Looking to see if we have enough interest to host an event.

Sign up by like.

This article tells the story of Flight For Life and the network of partners who answered the call during Hurricane Helen...
08/16/2025

This article tells the story of Flight For Life and the network of partners who answered the call during Hurricane Helene. First, a huge thank you to JAARS, whose team flew in massive amounts of supplies from Waxhaw to Avery County Airport in Spruce Pine. Extra gratitude goes to Samaritan’s Purse for their unwavering support, and to Operation Air Drop for delivering urgently needed goods into Hickory. Denice and Patrick from His Humble Hands kept the trucks rolling in from Lenoir, sending load after load of life-saving supplies. My brother Christopher Rhodes—who I truly believe was sent by God—led his team with prayer and grit, clearing roads and conducting search and rescue across South Toe, Cane River, North Toe, and even the Nolichucky in Tennessee.

A special shoutout to every volunteer who brought their own helicopters: Danny & Darlene Matthews of Carolina Helicopter Tours, Mission Destiny Helicopters, Tim and Grace Roth, Andy Petree, Greg Biffle, Cleetus McFarland, and the late Paul Jackson (RIP), along with many others. These pilots are the real heroes of Hurricane Helene. We can’t possibly thank them all enough.

Civilian Helicopter Relief in Western North Carolina During Hurricane Helene

When Hurricane Helene battered western North Carolina, whole mountain communities were suddenly cut off: roads washed out, supplies gone, and help nowhere in sight. What happened next was nothing short of remarkable—a massive, volunteer-driven aviation relief operation sprang up almost overnight, centered at Avery County Airport and Bethel Missionary Baptist Church (known as LZ1). This effort, called Flight For Life, showed just how powerful a grassroots disaster response can be.

How It All Came Together

Early on, Operation Helo and Operation Air Drop teamed up in Hickory, flying helicopters into places that trucks just couldn’t reach. They delivered food, water, medicine, and evacuated people who desperately needed out. As the situation stabilized, Operation Helo shifted focus to respond to Hurricane Milton, but later returned to help with rebuilding by bringing in campers and more supplies.

Flight For Life became the backbone of the ongoing civilian air response in North Carolina and eastern Tennessee. Pilots—many flying Robinson R44 and R66 helicopters, plus other small aircraft—came from all over. Avery County Airport served as the main staging area, and Bethel Missionary Baptist Church (LZ1) in Spruce Pine became the heart of the operation, receiving and distributing supplies.

At the peak, Flight For Life and its partners managed 50 to 60 helicopter flights a day, keeping up this pace for five months. They:

Delivered food, water, baby formula, and critical medical supplies to communities that had no other way in or out
Evacuated stranded residents and those with medical emergencies
Supported ongoing search and rescue efforts
Kept remote areas connected for more than five months, long before traditional responders could get there

The Role of Community and Churches

None of this would have worked without local partnerships. At Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, volunteers unloaded aircraft, sorted supplies, and made sure everything got where it needed to go. The church’s facilities and parking lots became mission control for the whole operation. Fuel, maintenance, and flight logistics came together thanks to local donations, fundraising, support from aviation businesses, financial backing from Shawn King of Cajun Navy Relief, and help from the Hickory Fairgrounds and the North Carolina American Legion. This made it possible for the pilots to fly as many missions as possible when ground travel was nearly impossible.

What Made This Different

Other groups—like Samaritan’s Purse—were also flying in supplies, but Flight For Life operated entirely separately. Operation Helo, after teaming up with Operation Air Drop in Hickory, shifted focus to another hurricane and wasn’t involved with Flight For Life’s ongoing missions in Avery County and Bethel. The large, sustained helicopter effort in those areas was led by local volunteers under the Flight For Life name.

Why It Mattered

The civilian helicopter response during Hurricane Helene raised the bar for what’s possible when regular people step up. Flight For Life showed that local initiative, trust, and the flexibility of small aircraft can save lives and bridge huge gaps in disaster relief. Their fast, creative response reached families long before official channels could, proving how much can be accomplished when communities, pilots, and churches work together. The lessons learned—especially about coordination and partnership—are already shaping how people in the Appalachians prepare for the next emergency.

For more details, operational info, or to connect with Flight For Life, visit www.flightforlife.net or check out our page. Operation BBQ Relief also partnered with us to deliver Thanksgiving meals to hard-to-reach mountain families.

HeleneRecovery Bethel Missionary Baptist Church

Flight for Life's mission is to provide swift, direct delivery of critical supplies to communities isolated by flooding in the wake of natural disasters. Through our helicopter-based response efforts, we aim to alleviate suffering, preserve life, and facilitate recovery in the most hard-to-reach are...

Flight for Life Helicopters: Amplifying Search and Rescue with FLIR, Winch Systems, and Integrated CommunicationsFlight ...
07/15/2025

Flight for Life Helicopters: Amplifying Search and Rescue with FLIR, Winch Systems, and Integrated Communications

Flight for Life helicopters have become indispensable assets in search and rescue (SAR) operations, especially in challenging scenarios like floods, wilderness rescues, and disaster zones. Their effectiveness stems not just from their speed and mobility, but from a thoughtful combination of advanced technology and skilled crews. When these aircraft are equipped with FLIR (Forward-Looking Infrared) cameras, winch systems, and integrated onboard communications such as ARC Edge and AGIS Common Operational Picture, they become force multipliers—enabling faster, safer, and more coordinated rescues.

FLIR Cameras: Seeing Beyond the Visible

Mounted FLIR cameras allow aircrews to detect heat signatures invisible to the naked eye. In SAR missions, this means they can quickly scan large areas for survivors, locate stranded individuals on rooftops, or even spot recently deceased flood victims who would be invisible in debris or at night. FLIR is especially valuable in low-visibility conditions—fog, darkness, or heavy vegetation—where traditional search methods fall short.

Winch Systems: Precision Rescue in Impossible Terrain

The addition of a winch system transforms a helicopter from a flying observation post into a direct rescue platform. When ground access is blocked by floodwaters, mud, or debris, aircrews can lower rescuers directly to victims or extract people from otherwise unreachable locations. This rapid-deployment capability not only saves time but can mean the difference between life and death in changing or hazardous environments.

ARC Edge Communications and AGIS Common Operational Picture: Real-Time Teamwork

Technology makes all the difference in chaotic rescue scenes. ARC Edge provides robust, encrypted voice and data communication between the helicopter and ground teams, ensuring everyone is working from the same playbook. AGIS Common Operational Picture (COP) takes this further by providing a live, shared map of the entire incident zone—showing helicopter movements, victim locations, hazards, and the positions of every responder.

Integrated SAR Dog Teams and Advanced Mapping

Unlike traditional mapping tools like Caltopo or Sartopo, which are often limited to tracking individual SAR team movements and markers, AGIS takes coordination to another level. We’ve integrated SAR dog teams directly into the AGIS system, allowing their tracks and HRD (Human Remains Detection) alerts to be continuously uploaded and visualized. AGIS can ingest these tracks from multiple teams, overlay them onto 2D or 3D mapping layers, and provide a unified operational picture for everyone involved.

This means SAR coordinators can immediately identify search gaps, spot areas where teams’ paths overlap, and—critically—see double HRD dog hits, which may indicate a strong location for human remains. The ability to aggregate and visualize these data points across agencies and disciplines reduces redundancy, sharpens focus, and helps ensure that no area goes unsearched or unnecessarily duplicated.

The Power of Integration: A Unified Air-Ground Response

The real magic happens when all these elements work together. The helicopter’s FLIR identifies a possible victim. The pilot marks the coordinates on the AGIS COP, instantly visible to everyone in the operation. ARC Edge ensures seamless communication as the winch operator lowers a medic into the scene. Ground and dog teams see the aircrew’s live visuals, coordinate their approach, and upload real-time tracks and search findings—all visible as overlays on the AGIS system.

This unified air-ground picture eliminates confusion, speeds up decision-making, and dramatically increases the odds of a successful rescue. Whether it’s finding stranded flood victims, extracting injured hikers, or coordinating multi-agency disaster responses, a Flight for Life helicopter equipped with FLIR, winch systems, ARC Edge, and AGIS COP—with integrated SAR dog teams—is more than just a rescue platform—it’s the nerve center of a modern, data-driven SAR operation.

07/14/2025
To Whom It May Concern,It’s not easy to sum up the impact someone like Taylor Dover has had during her time with Flight ...
07/12/2025

To Whom It May Concern,

It’s not easy to sum up the impact someone like Taylor Dover has had during her time with Flight for Life. In our line of work, there’s no shortage of long nights, tough calls, and moments where everything hangs in the balance. Taylor met each one with a quiet determination that never wavered, no matter how rough things got.

From the chaos of Hurricane Helene to the relentless pace of Operation Hurly, and through the heartbreak in Welch, WV and the devastation of the recent tornadoes in Kentucky, Taylor was there—always ready, always present. She’s seen more adversity in her years with us than most people will in a lifetime. And every single time, she brought not just skill and know-how, but a kind of steady, human warmth that’s impossible to teach.

Taylor’s decision to move on to a different calling is bittersweet for all of us who’ve worked alongside her. Selfishly, we’d love for her to have stayed. But if there’s one thing we know about Taylor, it’s that she follows her heart—wherever that leads. We have no doubt she’ll bring the same courage, compassion, and grit to whatever comes next.

On behalf of everyone at Flight for Life, thank you, Taylor. You’ve made a lasting difference here, and we’re all better for having known you.

With deepest gratitude,
Brian Clark COO
Flight for Life

Flight For Life  has reached out to Texas Emergency Management, offering our assets and search and rescue teams to assis...
07/08/2025

Flight For Life has reached out to Texas Emergency Management, offering our assets and search and rescue teams to assist. So far, we haven’t received any requests from them. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by this tragedy—those who have lost loved ones, and those still waiting for news about missing family or friends. Texas has one of the strongest emergency response operations in the country, and we deeply valued their support during Hurricane Helene in North Carolina. God bless Texas.

The United Christian Alliance is in Lampasas, Texas accessing the needs today. At this time it is still poring down rain. They are asking volunteers not to come and they are not taking any donations until further notice. The National Guard, Rangers and local businesses have covered all the immediate needs. We will be keeping up with the needs there and posting again when needs arise. It is 17+ hour drive from Morganton so instead of trying to send supplies down ourselves we will be sending monetary donations to our partnering groups closer to the flooding. If anyone wants to donate we will be taking up monetary donations to send down shortly.

Thanks to everyone that has contacted us about helping Texas!

Helicopters are essential in saving lives in flood areas. We pray for the safety of all the pilots and Air rescue teams ...
07/05/2025

Helicopters are essential in saving lives in flood areas. We pray for the safety of all the pilots and Air rescue teams responding to this tradegy.

Hot Fueling.
06/06/2025

Hot Fueling.

Address

345 Hicks Road
Coward, SC
29530

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Friday 8:30am - 5:30pm
Saturday 8:30am - 1pm

Telephone

+13366289711

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