Antelope Valley Press

Parade rolls for COVID-recovered Vietnam vet

- By DENNIS ANDERSON

LANCASTER — Walter Sapp, a retired lieutenant commander in the Coast Guard, believed he had done well enough in life when he survived Vietnam as a fighting sailor in what was called “the brown water navy” — boats that fought the Viet Cong on coastal and inland waterways 50 years ago.

He never got a “Welcome Home” parade for that. But on Saturday, he got a parade and salute for surviving COVID-19, the virus that has killed more than 130,000 Americans, many of them older citizens. More than 3 million Americans are infected, with Los Angeles County one of the nation’s hot spots.

“I spent three months and five days in the hospital,” Sapp said in an interview from his home. “And 39 days of it were in a coma. I don’t remember anything.”

Sapp, known across the community as a veterans community supporter and Loyal Knight of Elks Lodge 1625 in Lancaster, was welcomed home by a thundering procession of motorcycli­sts from Patriot Guard Riders, Patriot Crusaders, bikers who ride with American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars. Following in cars were vet supporters from Sapp’s own military support group, Coffee4Vet­s, as well as Vets4Veter­ans and Point Man of the Antelope Valley and other groups.

The signs were simple: “Welcome Home, Walter,” “We Love You, Walter” and “Semper Paratus,” the US Coast Guard motto, meaning “Always Prepared.”

Uniformed youth Scouts held aloft Old Glory and a Coast Guard flag, while Sapp, 76, waited on the front lawn, masked and wheelchair mobile.

“I never leave the house without my mask,” he said. “This is serious.”

Sapp’s 97-day ordeal began in March when his wife Susan, noted that he had a fever. They drove around town, seeking a drug store or pharmacy that would have an electronic thermomete­r, “but they were already sold out everywhere.”

He did not want to go to a regular doctor’s appointmen­t the next day, but Susan insisted. They got to the doctor’s office and his regular care physician noted fever and that his oxygen level was dangerousl­y low.

“He called 911, and that is the last thing that I remember,” Sapp said.

His circumstan­ces were dire. He had a number of markers, things that could render his case more complicate­d. He was a 76-year-old African-American man with underlying conditions from his exposures to chemicals during the Vietnam War. The majority of fatalities have been above the age of 65, with underlying health conditions and disproport­ionate numbers of African-American deaths.

“At one point, they expected that he would die, but I would not let that happen,” his wife said.

Rather than increasing drugs for comfort, she insisted on a tracheotom­y. After about six weeks in the hospital, he was transferre­d to Greater West Los Angeles VA Healthcare Center.

“I had already been in the ICU,” Sapp recalled. “I had a tracheotom­y, ventilator, dialysis and I cannot remember anything.”

When he regained consciousn­ess and bare awareness of surroundin­gs, he said, “I thought I was in Canada. I kept asking how was my wife going to bring my truck up from Seattle to Canada.”

To be able to return home a little over a week ago, he had to regain weight and muscle mass. He spent weeks in physical therapy. Dialysis, he said, he doesn’t mind, “because it keeps me alive.”

Meanwhile, family, friends and veterans supporters kept track of the Sapps’ ordeal on social media, with updates.

In the Coast Guard, he lived an adventurou­s life, returning home from Vietnam as a petty officer and entering Officer Candidate School. After a couple of decades of war, pursuing drug smugglers and rescues at sea, the Coast Guard wanted him to take a desk job in New York, as the Coast Guard’s offices were in Brooklyn, and he turned them down. His children were on Kodiak Island and he said he would rather go to sea than go to New York.

With a master’s degree from George Washington University, he worked for many years as the chief finance officer for the city of Valdez, Alaska.

Post retirement in Lancaster, he has been active in veterans support events and rising in the orders and honors of the Elks Lodge.

He and Susan agreed that Saturday was “a wonderful party.”

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Walter Sapp holds a United States Coast Guard flag, as he watches a parade in his honor on Saturday. After a three-month battle, Sapp overcame COVID-19.
COURTESY PHOTO Walter Sapp holds a United States Coast Guard flag, as he watches a parade in his honor on Saturday. After a three-month battle, Sapp overcame COVID-19.

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