Hey Veterans, Gotta Story To Share! (1 Viewer)

detroitdad

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I know PCF has a bunch of Veterans. If you want to share a little bit about your service, rock n roll? I love learning about our Military chippers. Feel free to share were you stationed, career choice, any stories that you are comfortable with, ect....

If you didn't serve, but you are a family member of a Vet and want to share, please join in.

I served active duty in the USAF from 1987 - 1992. I'll post more later when my day slows down.


B
 
I've got a few minutes before my next meeting. I'll start off sharing about my grandfather. He served in WW II. He didn't talk about it a lot. He mainly just said how frustrating it was. He was a bridge builder. More times than not they would be halfway through building a bridge and it would get blown up. He survived the war without any physical injuries.

A couple of things about my grandfather. He always embraced you when you came over. He always had the biggest, most sincere smile on his face. This was even when he had bone cancer (fuck cancer) which is what ended up taking his life.

He was the biggest John Wayne fan ever. He had portraits, souvenirs, and even a 3 foot tall statue lol. I've watched an endless amount of JW movies with him. Even today when one is on I can't help but watch a few minutes of it for pure nostalgia reasons.

Anyways, later I'll share some of my experiences
 
I've got a few minutes before my next meeting. I'll start off sharing about my grandfather. He served in WW II. He didn't talk about it a lot. He mainly just said how frustrating it was. He was a bridge builder. More times than not they would be halfway through building a bridge and it would get blown up. He survived the war without any physical injuries.

A couple of things about my grandfather. He always embraced you when you came over. He always had the biggest, most sincere smile on his face. This was even when he had bone cancer (fuck cancer) which is what ended up taking his life.

He was the biggest John Wayne fan ever. He had portraits, souvenirs, and even a 3 foot tall statue lol. I've watched an endless amount of JW movies with him. Even today when one is on I can't help but watch a few minutes of it for pure nostalgia reasons.

Anyways, later I'll share some of my experiences
Off topic but my favorite JW movie is True Grit!
 
Happy Veterans Day all!

Joined the Army at 24 back in 2009 wanting to fly helicopters. Got qual'd in the UH-60 but ended up going fixed wing based off the recommendations of my instructors while going through flight training. Got qual'd in the RC-12, moved to Germany for a few years and from there deployed 4 times to Afghanistan. Shorter deployments - only 3-4 months each. From there moved to Arizona to be a flight instructor. Decided to get out and against reasonable and sound judgement joined the Coast Guard during the summer of 2017. Was a HC-144 Search and Rescue pilot. Currently at the same unit but working as an instructor.
 
Great idea for a thread!

My grandfather flew B-17 bombers in WWII. My absolute favorite story he told of the war was the Chowhound missions he flew. Quick backstory: Operation Chowhound was a humanitarian effort to help Dutch citizens who were not liberated from the Nazis yet. The war wasn't technically over yet, and the Nazis were basically stealing/destroying everything on their way out just to f*ck with the Dutch, leaving them to starve to death. So, instead of dropping bombs from the plans, we flew over and dropped crates of food & supplies. The planes were not armed, so they had to fly super low to avoid being shot at. My grandfather would also talk about the thrill of flying a few hundred feet off the ground, and that there was an old church with a large steeple on their route, that was always a landmark that stuck in his memory.

Anyway, to the good part of the story. My Grandfather was a talker, and loved to tell stories to anybody. In the 1990's, he was retired living in Florida. Walking the beach one day he saw a man wearing wooden shoes. He ran up to him and started telling him how he flew planes in the man's homeland back in the day, etc. etc... As he's telling him about the Chowhound missions, the man starts crying. He was a kid at the time, but he was there and remembered when the planes dropped the crates of food in his town. My Grandfather talked about the church he flew by on the mission, and the man knew the church. We're pretty sure my Grandfather's missions were to this mans town. He kept saying "you saved my life".

Story always makes me teary-eyed

17854948_10155037740219404_1306352519213411726_o.jpg
 
Great idea for a thread!

My grandfather flew B-17 bombers in WWII. My absolute favorite story he told of the war was the Chowhound missions he flew. Quick backstory: Operation Chowhound was a humanitarian effort to help Dutch citizens who were not liberated from the Nazis yet. The war wasn't technically over yet, and the Nazis were basically stealing/destroying everything on their way out just to f*ck with the Dutch, leaving them to starve to death. So, instead of dropping bombs from the plans, we flew over and dropped crates of food & supplies. The planes were not armed, so they had to fly super low to avoid being shot at. My grandfather would also talk about the thrill of flying a few hundred feet off the ground, and that there was an old church with a large steeple on their route, that was always a landmark that stuck in his memory.

Anyway, to the good part of the story. My Grandfather was a talker, and loved to tell stories to anybody. In the 1990's, he was retired living in Florida. Walking the beach one day he saw a man wearing wooden shoes. He ran up to him and started telling him how he flew planes in the man's homeland back in the day, etc. etc... As he's telling him about the Chowhound missions, the man starts crying. He was a kid at the time, but he was there and remembered when the planes dropped the crates of food in his town. My Grandfather talked about the church he flew by on the mission, and the man knew the church. We're pretty sure my Grandfather's missions were to this mans town. He kept saying "you saved my life".

Story always makes me teary-eyed

17854948_10155037740219404_1306352519213411726_o.jpg

Dude, that just gave me goosebumps. This has already turned into the best thread of the day.

Thank you very much for sharing!
 
USAF Band of MidAmerica 1974-78 based out of Scott AFB in Belleville Illinois. I sang and played tenor sax in the rock band Sound Odyssey. We received an Air Force commendation medal for excellence in performing our duty of supporting the Air Force recruiting effort. I was 18 when I joined right out of high school. Thank you all fellow veterans for your service.
 
USAF Band of MidAmerica 1974-78 based out of Scott AFB in Belleville Illinois. I sang and played tenor sax in the rock band Sound Odyssey. We received an Air Force commendation medal for excellence in performing our duty of supporting the Air Force recruiting effort. I was 18 when I joined right out of high school. Thank you all fellow veterans for your service.

Thank you for sharing!
 
Thanks Craig!

I served 1987 - 1992. I went in a few weeks after high school. I was a Canine Police Officer. I worked a narcotics k-9 for 3 of my 5 years. That was a lot of fun. People have asked me why I didn't serve 20 years after doing 5. Here were my assignments. Grand Forks, ND, Minot ND, and Kunsan AFB in S. Korea. All shit assignments. Due to my clearance level I was going to continue getting shit assignments. On top of that I met Colleen in 88, married in 89, had our first kid in 89. I missed my daughters first birthday due to a 12 month assignment in Korea. I decided that was going to be the only time that I was leaving them. Since you can't turn down assignments in the military, I got out.

I loved my job. Nothing like going to work with a canine partner. A tremendous experience!

In 88, before I met Colleen I went TDY to Panama to serve during that conflict. That was an eye opening experience at what they trusted a 19 year old to do lol. We worked three days on and three days off. During the three workdays we probably put in 40'ish hours a week. Nobody complained. You just did it. Plus, it was better than the Marines schedule. They worked 28 and 2. Yes, 28 days and 2 days off. I worked with those guys a lot since I was Canine. I would take them cigs, candy, and shit. Then the first two days off we would hit downtown Panama. We partied enough that we were arrested and thrown in a panama jail. Drunk and disorderly, fighting, just being assholes. The worse part was the First Sargent picking us up. Needless to say we lost all privilege when it came to leaving the base for the rest of our tour. Holy shit was it fun.

Usually a question that gets asked is if I released my dog on anyone. I did have one bite. A drunk was being escorted through the PD as I was leaving. He wasn't cuffed. As they walked by me he lunged at my dog. My dog bit him in the stomach. I think he needed about 30 stitches. We added attempted assault to a MWD lol

For awhile I had the only certified Narcotics canine at Grand Forks AFB. It was my day off. We were having a summer party at the house. I think that was when those Coors Party balls were in. I get a call that I need to report to the Kennels for a search of a plane. Anytime a plane lands in the states from out of county it had to be searched (non military planes). I explained that I was hammered and in no condition to drive. They sent a police car to my house, made me leave the party to do this search. I thought I was going to vomit a few times while conducting the search lol.

I could go on and on and on. It was a great experience. I got to do a bunch of stuff that most kids won't ever experience. I met the love of my live thanks to being in the military. As much as it sucked at times, it did a lot for me.
 
I got another fun story.

My dog at Grand Forks was batshit crazy. He was a 55 pound belgian malinois (most of fricken crazy). I was a one stripper. About as green as it gets. Were working midnights and the undercover guys show up. We need your canine officer. I was the only one on duty. There were these two couples that shared a duplex. We were raiding their house. They had been investigated for B & E's downtown and we were going to arrest them. The only prep I get is when we meet a few streets over. They tell me to draw my weapon, they'll knock down the door, then I'm the first one since I had a canine. I'm like WTF? The Staff SGT said that everyone will be screaming for them to get down, if they don't, release your dog on them. I'm scared shitless that I'm going to accidently shoot someone while trying to control this crazy dog.

It ended up going really well. They bust the door down, we charge in. They immediately drop to the floor. After the dog calmed down, I did a narc search of the house and we located a few bags of pot along with about 60k worth of stolen shit that they were storing in the guest room while they tried to figure out how to sell it.
 
Usually a question that gets asked is if I released my dog on anyone. I did have one bite. A drunk was being escorted through the PD as I was leaving. He wasn't cuffed. As they walked by me he lunged at my dog. My dog bit him in the stomach. I think he needed about 30 stitches. We added attempted assault to a MWD lol
Holy crap! Well, play stupid games.......

A former coworker of mine breeds and trains service dogs. He used to train them for narcotics, and then cadaver dogs. He always had some fun stories. Now he trains medical alert dogs, mostly for diabetics. It's amazing what they can do.


To keep this thread on theme, he served in the National Guard.
 
What’s the difference between a sea story and a fairy tale?

A sea story starts with “This is a no-shitter…”
 
I snuck a few foreign warships into fun US port so the sailors could get some R&R after a long cruise. When my buddy tried doing it the proper way the following year, the Navy lost their shit and shut it down.

I ran a blockade against a big US port. That one was super dumb- we got some really bananas intel that stank to high heaven and the whole thing was set up wrong (not my fault!). But yeah, a blockade in the 2000s, against a US port.

Some buddies rented a beat-up K-car in Guantanamo Bay and used it as their golf cart. When it ran out of gas on the course, they left it there.
 
My father was a Marine in WWII, serving in the Pacific as part of the first division. Joined at age 16. It was the first time in his life he got to eat regular meals - even whole onions when he wanted. ( he ate yellow onions like an apple. Yucky! )

He didn't talk much about the war except about practical jokes. Let's just say he made private more than once in his service. Likely would have been discharged from today's Marine Corp. Favorite story was about a training grenade, the officers latrine and the fact the training grenade still had an explosive effect.

The only battle he talked about was Peleliu - - - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Peleliu He was on the first wave. Noting that the first wave sounded like a bad assignment but getting on the beach first meant you got the best cover before the resistance got stiffened. The poor men coming in the later waves had it worse. At least so he said.

Dad had some sort of PTSD but that wasn't a thing in the 50s and 60s. We went to see Saving Private Ryan but couldn't stay till the end. He did allow the beach landing stuff was a reasonable version a few days after the movie.

Yes - this makes me that old -=- DrStrange
 
I had a less-than-sharp boss who approved a 40-day leave chit (well beyond max allowable). So I snuck off to Australia on an Air Force flight. I lost my wallet on layover in Honolulu, including my military ID. I had walked all over Hickam that day and had to retrace my steps with just a tiny pen light as I ran around bunkers at night. Dejected, I was evaluating my options as I couldn’t continue to Australia, when they paged me at the airport as they were boarding our flight. Some dude found my wallet in the crease of a chair and promptly fell asleep. Fortunately, he woke up just in time and I made the flight, a blistered-foot-total-stinking-mess from my sprint around the island. It was a loooooooong flight. Fortunately there was space on the C-5 so folks could avoid me.

I was back in Hawaii on government business a few years later. I upgraded myself to first class for the long haul from DC. Total cost was still less than the government ticket, but it turned my ticket into a non-refundable, non-changeable ticket. When I landed, I learned a hurricane was on the way and my trip may be cancelled, leaving me with the prospect of flying out the next day, cost of that return flight on me. Fortunately, the hurricane just missed us.

On that same business trip, I went surfing on Waikiki Beach. Well… “surfing.” I apparently missed the signs warning me of the coral, and proceeded to jump off my board after a wave. Unbeknownst to me, I gashed the top of my foot on the coral (thankfully no sharks and lucky to have just missed the big vein). I discovered the problem when I got out of the water a bit later and saw blood gushing from my foot. The lifeguard and beach doc took care of me, but as a result of the stitches, I had to wear flops for the second week I was there, which of course meant I “had” to ditch my uniform and wear the only civilian clothes with me- shorts and t-shirts! :cool
54DB1FAC-8AA3-425A-AD17-0EC5E4592743.jpeg
 
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My Scottish Grandfather worked as a mechanic on Spitfires during the Battle of Britain. He did not speak of the war.

My Canadian Grandfather served in the Canadian Infantry in the PPCLI and went to war in Italy and eventually took part in D-Day. He saw his best friend blowen up by a German grenade, and he also never spoke of the war.

My wife's sister was married to the grand nephew of Ernest "Smokey" Smith. The last Canadian Victoria Cross winner.

When I was 5 I wanted to be a British Commando. I had the opportunity few kids had, and that was as a Canadian, with a Scottish father, I could join the British Forces. My dad strictly forbade it as he said I would have been sent to Northern Ireland.

As a kid I was in cadets in the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada (The same regiment as Smokey). I joined the Canadian Army in 1988, did basic, battle school, jump school (qualified Airborne), and sniper school. I eventually join the PPCLI (in the same battalion as my Canadian Grandfather). I served many tours in Bosnia/Croatia. First as a peacekeeper for the UN, then as an over watch for my platoon. I went to Somolia in '93 and was there for 6 weeks to serve as over watch for both the Canadian and American forces. I went back to Bosnia and Croatia, and was seconded to the American Army and did some work for them (classified information). I made it back to Canada in 1994, and was asked to re-up. My actual words were "NO FUCKING WAY". Turns out I would have been sent to Rwanda. When I was transitioning out of the Army, I had to go through a decompression course due to what I had been through. I failed the 8 week course 3 times. They basically want to take the "beast" out of you and make you a "normal" person again. Turns out, the beast is only sleeping in me.

Good thing I didn't join the British Army.....eh?

Edit: I am open to an AMA to a certain point. Please be prepared for a "It's classified" answer.
 
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How I joined the Navy:

My dad was a submarine sailor....he enlisted straight out of high school after his cousin got blown up in the Army. He ended up doing 11 years, but got out because he was up for sea duty again after teaching Sonar in San Diego for a stint....my middle brother and I were both the anchors to keep him ashore. My dad was a hot tempered scary dad....he didnt beat us or anything, but we as kids definitely steered clear. It seemed he was never happy with us kids...very tough to please. Fast forward to my third semester of local college, I got kicked out of two separate fraternities, changed my major for the third time (to be a teacher), and lost my job as a waiter. First time I can remember my dad being proud of me was when I told him to take me to the recruiter.

I ended up doing just short of 6 years as a nuclear mechanic and chemist serving on the USS Seahorse (see avatar). Used my experience to jump into the semiconductor industry then later my current job in animal research.

Additional fact: my dad and I had a rocky relationship up until I was in nuke school and drove up from Orlando to home in South Carolina. He was supposed to help me with something on my car and he let me down. I called him on it and told him it was bullshit and left. After that, I guess he saw me as my own man and treated me as such. He was not the best dad, but he was fiercely loyal to his grandkids. He died of lung cancer a few years ago from smoking and possibly asbestos exposure....and is the reason I just cannot stomach the smell of cigarettes today. I miss him today....on Veteran's day.
 
Really enjoying these stories - thanks to all for sharing and of course for your service.

My father was a Marine in WWII, serving in the Pacific as part of the first division. Joined at age 16. It was the first time in his life he got to eat regular meals - even whole onions when he wanted. ( he ate yellow onions like an apple. Yucky! )

He didn't talk much about the war except about practical jokes. Let's just say he made private more than once in his service. Likely would have been discharged from today's Marine Corp. Favorite story was about a training grenade, the officers latrine and the fact the training grenade still had an explosive effect.

The only battle he talked about was Peleliu - - - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Peleliu He was on the first wave. Noting that the first wave sounded like a bad assignment but getting on the beach first meant you got the best cover before the resistance got stiffened. The poor men coming in the later waves had it worse. At least so he said.

Dad had some sort of PTSD but that wasn't a thing in the 50s and 60s. We went to see Saving Private Ryan but couldn't stay till the end. He did allow the beach landing stuff was a reasonable version a few days after the movie.

Yes - this makes me that old -=- DrStrange
@DrStrange thanks for sharing about your father. That battle is considered one of the hardest in Marine Corps history and few know about it. I was really affected by the book With The Old Breed that discussed the battle and what those brave Marines endured there. I put it right up there with “a helmet for my pillow” and “red blood black sand” for mandatory reading about the war in the pacific. Dan Carlin’s recently concluded podcast on the war in the pacific called “supernova in the east” also covered it.

With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0891419063/ref=cm_sw_r_awdo_navT_a_FKDZDGEGREXY8XN3CEFP

Helmet for My Pillow: From Parris Island to the Pacific https://www.amazon.com/dp/1977052304/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_K307P791DS5H4C6KMN4T

Red Blood, Black Sand: Fighting Alongside John Basilone from Boot Camp to Iwo Jima https://www.amazon.com/dp/0425257428/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_Q5817T0ZX5HCF6PAPE0D

https://www.dancarlin.com/product/hardcore-history-62-supernova-in-the-east-i/

Both of my Grandfathers served in Korea. My wife’s grandfather served there as well and was killed in action. I wrote about it here for anyone who might be interested. I’ve shared it before.

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/memorial-day-rememberance-patrick-gahagan-cpa-cia-cfe
 
My Scottish Grandfather worked as a mechanic on Spitfires during the Battle of Britain. He did not speak of the war.

My Canadian Grandfather served in the Canadian Infantry in the PPCLI and went to war in Italy and eventually took part in D-Day. He saw his best friend blowen up by a German grenade, and he also never spoke of the war.

My wife's sister was married to the grand nephew of Ernest "Smokey" Smith. The last Canadian Victoria Cross winner.

When I was 5 I wanted to be a British Commando. I had the opportunity few kids had, and that was as a Canadian, with a Scottish father, I could join the British Forces. My dad strictly forbade it as he said I would have been sent to Northern Ireland.

As a kid I was in cadets in the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada (The same regiment as Smokey). I joined the Canadian Army in 1988, did basic, battle school, jump school (qualified Airborne), and sniper school. I eventually join the PPCLI (in the same battalion as my Canadian Grandfather). I served many tours in Bosnia/Croatia. First as a peacekeeper for the UN, then as an over watch for my platoon. I went to Somolia in '93 and was there for 6 weeks to serve as over watch for both the Canadian and American forces. I went back to Bosnia and Croatia, and was seconded to the American Army and did some work for them (classified information). I made it back to Canada in 1994, and was asked to re-up. My actual words were "NO FUCKING WAY". Turns out I would have been sent to Rwanda. When I was transitioning out of the Army, I had to go through a decompression course due to what I had been through. I failed the 8 week course 3 times. They basically want to take the "beast" out of you and make you a "normal" person again. Turns out, the beast is only sleeping in me.

Good thing I didn't join the British Army.....eh?

Edit: I am open to an AMA to a certain point. Please be prepared for a "It's classified" answer.
Few appreciate the extent to which the Canadian Army has extensive combat experience across the world due to peacekeeping missions. I read the book “Peacekeeper: The Road to Sarajevo” by Major General Lewis MacKenzie years ago- I still have it. Super fascinating.
 
My paternal grandfather and his brother both lied about their age and joined the Army in WWI. They trained in California and were sent to the Eastern Front by way of Russia. The war ended as they were sailing across the Pacific, so they turned around. He got so motion sick he never stepped foot on a boat again.

My maternal grandfather joined the Army as well. He was early Army Air Corps, although I don’t know much beyond that.

My great uncle fought in the Pacific during WWII- he didn’t speak much of it, although I have some old books of his, including one his unit produced that covered their history over there. That was a brutal theater.

My father joined the Navy Reserve during the Vietnam war. Deferments were disappearing, he didn’t want to fight, and he had a bad feeling. His draft number was called 2 weeks later. Draft dodger joins Navy Reserve, performs security at a Navy base and later becomes a JAG officer doing 30+ years. I grew up thinking he was a war hero and only found out the truth much later. Can’t really blame him.

My brother joined the Navy after our father’s wife threatened to kick him out of the house. He “majored” in snowboarding at college didn’t do well at school, returning home after a bit. Why the Navy? Because the Air Force recruiting center waiting area was nothing but women. Dumb, on multiple levels. But the Navy did him good, he shaped up, became and officer, and did 20+ years. He eventually got his Masters in a field he loves and has had an interesting career. He has some bonkers stories, like how he gave himself a prison tat on his arm because he was bored during a long cruise on a carrier.

I joined the Coast Guard because my father told me he couldn’t afford college. I didn’t want to get stuck in a tank with my bad knees, I couldn’t fly because of my eyes, Full Metal Jacket turned me off the Marines, and everyone I met on a Navy cruiser during a “the Navy’s great” day cruise was downright miserable, so I knew DoD was out. Fortunately, my high school guidance counselor misfiled some school brochures and I stumbled upon the sexy orange Coast Guard Academy brochure by mistake. I fell in love. I told myself I’d stay if I was happy and leave if I wasn’t. I retired a happy man after 20+ years. I had a lot of fun and did some amazing stuff. Super lucky how it turned out.
 

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