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Sailor Steve
06-26-09, 02:48 PM
Forty years ago today, June 26, 1969, I was inducted into the United States Navy.

Nothing more to add, really.

Platapus
06-26-09, 03:05 PM
The only thing I can think of adding is this:

Thank you for your service to our country. :salute:

CastleBravo
06-26-09, 03:06 PM
Did you volunteer?, drafted? There must be more to it. Please share.:)

Jimbuna
06-26-09, 04:48 PM
Forty years ago I was dreaming of joining the navy when I left school and wondering if there was any truth in the stories I kept hearing about sailors :DL

OneToughHerring
06-26-09, 05:30 PM
Did you volunteer?, drafted? There must be more to it. Please share.:)

Yes tell us. :)

I've actually listened to a lecture where there was a kid of a Vietnam veteran talking about his old man's experience in the war. It was pretty interesting.

Chad
06-26-09, 06:14 PM
Tell us more Steve :D

UnderseaLcpl
06-27-09, 12:31 AM
Tell us more Steve :D

Yes! Story time!:DL

Jimbuna
06-27-09, 02:34 PM
Yes! Story time!:DL

Once upon a time....:DL

:O:

Dowly
06-27-09, 03:06 PM
Once upon a time....

... there was a young man called Steve...

Task Force
06-27-09, 03:12 PM
...who joined the navy...

CastleBravo
06-27-09, 03:14 PM
......because Utah was so dry.........

Sailor Steve
06-27-09, 03:15 PM
Did you volunteer?, drafted? There must be more to it. Please share.:)
Volunteered, but for the wrong reasons. The draft during the Vietnam era could mean the army or marines, but air force and navy were voluteer only. I was afraid of being drafted into the army, as I didn't think getting shot at was necessarily a good career move, so I tried to join the coast guard and was told they had a six-month waiting list. The navy, on the other hand, was eager to have any able body they could get.

Boot camp was probably nowhere near as tough as the marines', but it wasn't a piece of cake either. First day, 0400 hours, the lights come on and there's our new Company Commander (the navy's equivalent of a Drill Instructor) banging a garbage can and shouting at us to get up and moving. First was the head-buzzing, then the wait to be issued uniforms, which at that time was limited to dungaree pants (stove-pipe denims) and chambray shirts (light blue work shirts), plus skivvies (undies) and socks. Then to the barracks to learn how to fold them all and pack the locker 'properly' (i.e. "Theres the right way, the wrong way, and the navy way!)"

Then learning to make a bed the navy way. "You WILL fold the corner in this manner, and you WILL tuck it here!" No "or else", just do it this way. No-one in boot camp ever asks "or else?", because no-one wants to find out just how bad it can get.

Miles of marching, learning how things are done on ship, classes on naval history - mostly why the uniform has that funny flap on the back (because in the old days when sailors had long hair they used grease to keep it from flying around - the flap was a separate leather piece that kept the grease off the clothes) and why they wear that silly kerchief (because the leather flap tied around your neck, stupid!). It brings to mind Tevye's line from Fiddler On The Roof: "And why, you may ask, do we have these traditions? I'll tell you - I don't know! But we have them!"

I'm amazed at how much I remember after all this time, including how to do the 16-Count-Manual-At-Arms. But most of it's actually boring. I really just wanted to celebrate another anniversary come-and-gone.

Sailor Steve
06-27-09, 03:18 PM
Once upon a time....:DL

:O:
That of course is one of my favorite jokes.

Q: What's the difference between a fairy tale and a war story?

A: A fairy tale begins "Once upon a time...". A war story begins "No $#!+, there I was..."

Sailor Steve
06-27-09, 03:18 PM
......because Utah was so dry.........
Actually I grew up in Southern California.

CastleBravo
06-27-09, 03:26 PM
mostly why the uniform has that funny flap on the back (because in the old days when sailors had long hair they used grease to keep it from flying around - the flap was a separate leather piece that kept the grease off the clothes) and why they wear that silly kerchief (because the leather flap tied around your neck, stupid!). .

That was not known to me. Thanks for sharing...way cool! Marines, I'm told, are known as leathernecks because when cutlasses were the weapon of choice, a band of leather was used to keep ones head, at least by the Marines..

PS SoCal is also dry. But admitedly closer to open ocean.

Dowly
06-27-09, 03:26 PM
...who joined the navy...

See, you are following me! :stare:

EDIT: Ow and Castlebravo, your sig made me laugh. Thanks! :haha:

Task Force
06-27-09, 03:31 PM
Im innocent i tell ya im innocent.:rotfl:

Yea same here, his sig is funny.:yep:

Jimbuna
06-27-09, 03:35 PM
That of course is one of my favorite jokes.

Q: What's the difference between a fairy tale and a war story?

A: A fairy tale begins "Once upon a time...". A war story begins "No $#!+, there I was..."

Over here in the UK it often goes something like:

The boy stood on the burning deck
His heart was all a quiver
He gave a cough
His leg fell off
And floated down the river...:03:

CastleBravo
06-27-09, 03:42 PM
A war story begins "No $#!+, there I was....inverted, behind the power curve, in the dark, with a tornado.......on the ILS.....needles centered".

OneToughHerring
06-28-09, 01:27 PM
Volunteered, but for the wrong reasons. The draft during the Vietnam era could mean the army or marines, but air force and navy were voluteer only. I was afraid of being drafted into the army, as I didn't think getting shot at was necessarily a good career move, so I tried to join the coast guard and was told they had a six-month waiting list. The navy, on the other hand, was eager to have any able body they could get.

Boot camp was probably nowhere near as tough as the marines', but it wasn't a piece of cake either. First day, 0400 hours, the lights come on and there's our new Company Commander (the navy's equivalent of a Drill Instructor) banging a garbage can and shouting at us to get up and moving. First was the head-buzzing, then the wait to be issued uniforms, which at that time was limited to dungaree pants (stove-pipe denims) and chambray shirts (light blue work shirts), plus skivvies (undies) and socks. Then to the barracks to learn how to fold them all and pack the locker 'properly' (i.e. "Theres the right way, the wrong way, and the navy way!)"

Then learning to make a bed the navy way. "You WILL fold the corner in this manner, and you WILL tuck it here!" No "or else", just do it this way. No-one in boot camp ever asks "or else?", because no-one wants to find out just how bad it can get.

Miles of marching, learning how things are done on ship, classes on naval history - mostly why the uniform has that funny flap on the back (because in the old days when sailors had long hair they used grease to keep it from flying around - the flap was a separate leather piece that kept the grease off the clothes) and why they wear that silly kerchief (because the leather flap tied around your neck, stupid!). It brings to mind Tevye's line from Fiddler On The Roof: "And why, you may ask, do we have these traditions? I'll tell you - I don't know! But we have them!"

I'm amazed at how much I remember after all this time, including how to do the 16-Count-Manual-At-Arms. But most of it's actually boring. I really just wanted to celebrate another anniversary come-and-gone.

More, more! :DL

Me, I probably couldn't have handled the navy, let alone one in war time. It's a difficult test for anyone, war.

nikimcbee
06-28-09, 01:40 PM
Forty years ago today, June 26, 1969, I was inducted into the United States Navy.

Nothing more to add, really.
Well, then what happened?

RickC Sniper
06-28-09, 04:15 PM
Where was boot camp Steve? Great Lakes naval base?

AVGWarhawk
06-28-09, 04:35 PM
Over here in the UK it often goes something like:

The boy stood on the burning deck
His heart was all a quiver
He gave a cough
His leg fell off
And floated down the river...:03:

Man, you guys are starved for entertainment:O: