Wednesday, December 28, 2005

airedale navy

It must have been a hard winter world wide in 62/63. We were four months into our Med Cruise. It was so cold that it snowed at sea. The first two weeks of December saw CAG 1 on the USS FDR. It was in the single digits most of the time, but on two occasions it was below zero. When we turned into the wind to launch aircraft, it was well below zero with the wind chill. The rain, sleet, snow, stung like so many hot needles. I hoped the plane would go to the hangar deck for a 90 hour check, but no luck. We spent the Christmas Holidays in Naples, Italy. Boating was cancelled many nights because the sea in the Bay of Naples had eight to ten feet rollers. The Liberty launch would come abreast of the gangway, and you had to leap to catch the ladder. Try that after several beers. But when boating was cancelled you could spent the night ashore. I remember putting the collar on my peacoat, and thinking how nice and toasty it felt. ( or it could have been the beer). On Christmas Eve, in Naples, I stood the quarterdeck watch with a bosun second class, with five hash marks. I had just made AME3. He asked me how many times I had taken the test. I said once. He just shook his head . My job was to watch the gangway going down to the mess decks, so that drunken sailors wouldn't fall down the ladder and break their necks. Christmas in Naples is kinda like the 4th of July, and Christmas, all wrapped up in one . Lotsa fireworks, gunshots, and bells at midnight.

So yes, cold is cold

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