By Gerry J.
Gilmore American Forces Press Service
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| WASHINGTON, April 16, 2008 - Retired Army reservist Joseph L. Bowser was 9
years old when he first experienced the thrill of skating and using his hockey
stick to whack a rubber puck across the ice on a frozen pond in his birthplace
of Toledo, Ohio.
Retired Army Sgt. 1st Class Joseph L. Bowser
plays competitive ice hockey despite the loss of his lower right leg due to an
injury suffered from an exploding enemy rocket April 12, 2004, in Balad, Iraq.
Courtesy photo (Click photo for screen-resolution
image);high-resolution image available.
| | Today,
the 48-year-old Iraq veteran still plays ice hockey, despite the loss of the
lower portion of his right leg four years ago during a rocket attack on Camp
Anaconda, in Balad, Iraq.
Bowser, then a truck driver with 283rd
Transportation Company based in Fairfield, Conn., recalled that the enemy attack
occurred on April 12, 2004, soon after he returned to Camp Anaconda after
delivering a 5,000-gallon load of jet fuel.
Bowser credits Connecticut
Army National Guard Maj. Michael McMahon, a physician assistant, for saving his
life. McMahon, he said, used his fingers to slow the bleeding from a gashed
artery on Bowser's injured right leg.
"He reached up on my leg to clamp
off my artery so I wouldn't 'bleed out,'" Bowser recalled.
McMahon, now
45, recalled during a recent phone interview from his home in Hamden, Conn.,
that his military training kicked in when he saw the stricken Bowser bleeding
profusely.
"You just react," McMahon said. "We took care of him and got
him stabilized. There was a combat surgical hospital in Balad.
"Once we
got the bleeding controlled, ... I thought he was going to make it," McMahon
recalled. Bowser and McMahon keep in touch; they met up in February when Bowser
was in Connecticut to play a hockey game.
Wearing body armor probably
also saved his life, Bowser said, noting his armored vest was riddled with
shrapnel damage. The then-staff sergeant also suffered shrapnel injuries to his
left hand.
Bowser said he arrived at Walter Reed Army Medical Center
here about a week after being wounded. The doctors thought he would have more
mobility with a prosthetic leg, he recalled, rather than by keeping his mangled
limb.
"The first thing that I thought of was that I wanted to play
hockey again," Bowser said. "So, I said I wanted to have it amputated."
Bowser spent more than two years of inpatient and outpatient recovery at
Walter Reed, and he was medically retired from the Army as a sergeant first
class in July 2006. He rates the medical care he received at Walter Reed as
"awesome."
"You couldn't ask for a better place," Bowser said of Walter
Reed.
Bowser now works at the Pentagon as an administrator for Army
Secretary Pete Geren. In his spare time he plays pickup hockey games at Maryland
rinks near his present-day home near Baltimore. He also occasionally travels to
play in hockey tournaments.
Bowser plays right wing, one of the three
forwards on an ice hockey team. The center and left winger make up the other
two-thirds of the forward line, and their job is to harass the opposing team and
score goals. Two defensive players are positioned rearward to protect the
goalie.
Bowser said his artificial leg can be adjusted to accommodate
his skating style, and that having a prosthetic limb actually has its advantages
during a rough-and-tumble game of hockey.
"You don't have to worry about
getting a puck slapped on your foot," Bowser said, noting he enjoys ice hockey's
speed of play and physical aspects.
Bowser completed as a member of the
U.S. National Amputee Hockey Team during the 2008 Standing Amputee Hockey World
Championships that were held April 2-6 in Marlborough, Mass. Team USA won the
silver medal at that four-team tournament, beating out teams from Latvia and
Finland. Canada won the gold medal, and Finland took the bronze.
Before
he got his job in the secretary of the Army's office, Bowser had volunteered to
work with injured military veterans as part of an initiative administered
through Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon R. England's office.
Bowser met
with a number of Washington Capitals professional ice hockey team players and
coaches when they paid an April 6 visit to the Pentagon last year. Later, he got
to skate with some Capitals players during a team practice.
The Capitals
hockey club has sponsored several Military Appreciation Nights at the Verizon
Center here for servicemembers and their families, Bowser noted.
"I've
gone there several times with wounded warrior guys from Walter Reed," Bowser
said. "They've just opened their doors to us. They totally support us."
Bowser, who got married April 12, said God gave him a second chance at
life after being severely wounded in Iraq. Grateful for each day of existence,
he strives to help his fellow wounded warriors.
"I treat each day like
my last ... (while) helping my fellow soldiers," Bowser said.
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