MisterCairo
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,005
- Location
- Gads Hill, Ontario
It would be great to head over, but our year is too full. We hope to get to the UK in 2020 (boy, that sounds weird) and perhaps we can get to Normandy for a visit.
How many crew members and how far offshore would it normally go? I imagine it was miserable in rough seas?The boat class I served my conscription on.
The crew has been 17 heads in peace time +6 in defence case.
Completely tanked up with Diesel, fresh water, oil…the boat was equipped for ten sea days at maximum Beaufort 6 and a maximum wave height of 3m.
As rolling in high waves has always been the worst option, we usually turned the nose into the sea then and surged the „storm“. Riding down 2m-3m high waves felt like sitting in a fast elevator and reaching the trough of a wave with that flat nose felt like crashing against a wall and the entire boat trembled quite massively.
Diesel consumption has been about 10 tons a sea day, depending on weather, if I remember correctly. „Top“ speed has been 11 knots so the maximum daily range was 264 nautical miles in water, not over ground, depending on direction and speed of current.
I left Cambridge degree in hand and joined the British Parachute Regiment instead of sitting80th D-Day celebration is kicking off! Events all week!
Today was a parachute jump from WWII era aircraft.
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/06/02/80th-anniversary-d-day-normandy-00161170
I literally remember sitting on my couch for the 50th anniversary and bemoaning the fact that (at that point) I had seen and done very little in life. In a sense, that 50th anniversary inspired me to see the world and get involved. May this weeks 80th anniversary inspire the younger generation to travel widely and aspire to great things.
Our thoughts and thanks go out to all who were there EIGHTY YEARS AGO.