In
those early days I jotted down occasional impressions, and some of them have
already been posted in my blog under the ‘reminiscences’ heading.
Here’s
another, from early training days in HMS Raleigh:
The day it
snowed we were the Guard. The snow did not lie very thickly, but it whitened
the parade ground. Our guard marched at the slope to the rear of the parade.
After the ‘Halt!’ command we were ‘into line left turned’.
The entire
parade was wearing gabardines. At the ‘off caps!’ order I was confronted by an
amusing sight. While the parade stood at ease, their caps (held to their rear)
appeared like a series of polka-dots; this was accentuated by the white base of
ground snow. And with the varying heights of numerous individuals the caps rose
and fell in rows very much like lines of surf. If you can imagine the bounce of
a ping pong ball slowed-down, it would look something like these rows of white
caps.
Anyway, the
polka-dot parade abstracted my thoughts from the cold.
I
retired from the RN on 2 August 1989.
First week - new issue of uniform,
including boots;
we had to sew on our branch and name badges;
the car was not mine!
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