Picture of the day:
Gerald Ford Air Craft Carrier
Today’s stuff:
I mentioned previously fire is dreaded aboard ship. I was forced to recall one just yesterday when I read of one lately on the Aircraft Carrier Gerald Ford, there was a big fire, it was reportedly started in the ships laundry, and burned thru compartments that contained a 600 beds. The ship was past it's time for over all maintenance and should NEVER have been deployed further. Someone dropped the ball. 12 months of 12-20 hour days kills moral.
After hours the entire ship is covered by sailors doing their after hours assignment as a ‘Fire Watch’. Each fire watch is assigned a specific area to patrol. The job is assigned to the lower pay grades and is broken down into 4 hour walks.
In my entire time at sea I experienced one fire. It just had to happen during one of my times as a ‘fire watch’. So after the shipboard notice was given over all speakers: “FIRE, FIRE 02 LEVEL FRAME 90, THIS IS NOT A DRILL, FIRE, FIRE”. It was my job to run my assigned area rushing sailors and officers to a weather deck. I will never forget one compartment the men were watching the movie ‘Rat Patrol’ on the TV, they were so engrossed they were fanning smoke from the screen, true dat. Sailors are crazy. They did leave, but did not want to.
That fire Report reminded me when blogging about shipboard life, I over looked the Laundry, a BIG part of ALL ships. Someone must do the laundry, right?
It is hard to wrap your mind around the jobs and requirements to run a ship. There are plenty of ‘side jobs’ called ADDITIONAL DUTIES All low ranks must spend so many weeks a year on mess duty (assisting the cooks), fire watch, compartment cleaning, mail Petty Officer, passageway cleaning, security duty, and burn runs (burning out dated classified documents and messages). As a fire watch you definitely learn parts of the ship you never knew existed. LOL
Enough, every job, occupation, and just life, has some boring and exciting parts. It has been nice meeting folks on line, losing some has sure made me sad at times. Right now, I am hit hardest thinking of Jean of Opp and Paula, the cowgirl. Two wonderful women we met on Journals and Blogs. Amazing how close we get sometimes.
All people are important. EVERYONE has a life, there fore a story. With the right writer, your life would make a best selling book.
See ya
Nite Shipslog
PS:
Life gets to you sometimes. Thanks for stopping by the Shipslog
Sherry is washing clothes today, and it is shaking the RV.





4 comments:
Another eye-opening post, Jack! All those at-sea rules and procedures are there for a reason.
Whenever I get to waxing poetic about life at sea, I need to remember this post!
You're so right ... EVERYONE has a story. I remember Sean of the South writing about how he got his start ... going to nursing homes and asking the staff if anyone had a "story." She just looked at him incredulously, "They ALL have stories." It's a pity so few people make time to listen.
Quite the operation getting the laundry done.
Must be a scary thing having a fire aboard ship!!!
Oh my! Yes, I can well imagine that a fire on a ship at sea would be very bad indeed! Even though there is plenty of water surrounding the ship, that really doesn't matter when there is an internal fire. Wow...another good reason why I am not interested in even going on a cruise! I would not make a good sailor! And yes, everyone has a story to tell, if only people would be courteous enough to listen! That's why blogging is so great! We can tell our stories in small chapters and people can read them at their leisure, or not at all. But at least the stories are "out there", and we never know what kind of influence our stories may have on others. Hopefully they will be encouraged by our life-stories, and how God carried us through the good, the bad, and the ugly times...and we lived to tell about it. Thank you for sharing your stories with us. I am still getting acquainted, but it is fun to read about your life and memories. Thank you!!!!
This was so interesting. I never ever . . .thought of all this on a ship. My nephew is on a ship right now.
That laundry was massive. I am so glad that the names were on everything. So you didn't have to fold them - you got them clean and to their rooms. Wow. I do love reading your memories.
Everyone one has a story - some aren't as interesting as yours!
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