Sunday, October 6, 2013

Watch and learn, Mr. Dow





I read an article by Stephen King about a story's opening line…like it’s THE most important part of any story.  So here are a few…

“Call me Jeffrey.” Not quite the same…
“Hello, I’m Jeffrey Dow.” No…I don’t have the pipes like the Man in Black
“It was the best of time, it was the…ok of times?” Really not good…

Just a lot of pressure…anyways…

For you, loyal readers, this is a prequel to The Parachute I & II…so it’s the third part of a trilogy…that is first…whatever…

So, as recounted in the aforementioned Parachute…it had been a BRUTUAL buoy trip.  A good pounding on the way to GANTSEC (awesome acronym that basically means the Coast Guard Base in San Juan, PR) and a major casualty to one of our Main Diesel Engines made the trip just short of insufferable…ok, it really was right at insufferable forget “nothing short of” crap.

Our sojourn to GTMO lay several weeks ahead of us and we were steaming along the south side of Puerto Rico.  It was hot, morale was low, and we were days if not weeks behind schedule.  The Captain had been aboard for six months and the XO reported only a few weeks before sailing.  The entire crew was sluggish and clearly wanted to be somewhere other than USCGC LAUREL.

In early stage of my career my primary duty was serving as the Executive Officers Admin Assistant.  Which meant I did his bidding…not a glamorous position.  I took care of the basic admin for the XO; correspondence, plan of the day, working with the yeoman and storekeeper.  I thought it was a bad collateral job and a dead end…I was wrong.  [EDITOR’S NOTE:  I learned A TON about being an XO and running a cutter which was INVALUABLE for my next tour…hey what did I know…I was an Ensign]. 

So, we were transiting along Puerto Rico’s south shore enroute another harbor to work buoys.  It was hot…I mean HOT…like hit in the head with a sledgehammer hot, humid to make you drown if you took too deep a breath hot.  It was less than fun on a trip that had descended into boredom, and increasing delays.  In summation:

“For the most part it stays on its regular run from Tedium to Apathy and back.  It makes and occasional trip to Monotony, and once it made a run all the way to Ennui.  It performs its dreary and unthanked job, and it performs it, if not inspiredly, then at least adequately.” [EDITOR’S NOTE: Significant bonus points to the first to identify that quote and the significance to my tour on LAUREL.]

With this as the backdrop…enter the XO.  The astute reader will remember that the XO had only recently reported aboard LAUREL and did so with no buoy tending experience…the dreaded “white hull sailor” and the strict adherence to rules and regulations, spit and polish, yes sir, no sir, three bags full sir.  We, the Junior Officers, feared this newcomer and what he might just represent.  Well, were we ever wrong—but we didn’t know that yet.

So, we were transiting south of Puerto Rico.  It was a Sunday as I recall and we august members of the Wardroom had gathered in front of the XO stateroom for our daily Officer’s Call (basically a meeting to get a rundown of the day).  Quarters, an all hands meeting on the fantail, immediately follows Officer’s Call.  There are six of us patiently waiting for XO to exit his stateroom—Officer’s Call is his meeting.

XO opens his stateroom door wearing a set of deck coveralls and proceeds to give us a run down of day’s schedule and upcoming items on the ship’s calendar.  Through all of this I am eyeing the XO in his coveralls…we are all in our standard undress blue uniform; suitable for working on the bridge but the XO was attired to be on the buoy deck working…except he is wearing a well blackened pair of decidedly non-steel toe leather shoes. 

So…feeling an allegiance to my XO and being his direct assistant I felt obligated to point out to the XO his obvious uniform glitch (NOT a wardrobe malfunction, mind you).

“Sir?”

“Yes, Mr. Dow?”

“Ah…sir, why are you wearing coveralls?”

“I’m glad you asked Mr. Dow.  I am showing solidarity for the Deck Department…they have been working hard and doing the best they can to get us back on schedule.”

“Yes, sir.  But why are you wearing leathers?”  “Leathers” was a holdover from the Academy to distinguish the much more military leather shoes than the ugly (and in my view, cheating) Corfam plastic shoe.

“Mr. Dow, I’m not actually going to WORK on the buoy deck; I am doing this to show solidarity!”

“Yes, sir…but…ahh….XO…”

“Yes.”

“Never mind.”  It’s his funeral. 

So, with this set up we, the Wardroom, make our way to the fantail where the 55 or so sailors aboard mighty LAUREL await.  The Captain is already there at the head of the formation and the officers fall in with their departments.  I am, almost, feeling nauseous at what is about to happen.  After a few mundane announcements the XO breaks ranks and begins to recount our buoy trip and all the various and sundry mishaps. 

“But, I want to go over some of the highlights we have had so far.”

“The Deck Department has been breaking records the last few days trying to get us back on track.  Nice job, keep this up and we will make it home right at Thanksgiving! [EDITORS NOTE: We did NOT make it back for Thanksgiving…see previous stories].  Now, we just need all the Departments to pull their weight like the Engineers have been doing.”

This may seem innocuous but it was an implied slight to Operations…my department.  One of our more colorful shipmates was the second class quartermaster (QM2).  He was a solid shipmate, do anything for you, good navigator and quite possible crazy.  As the XO continued to intone about the Deckies, the QM2 started mumbling, in a slow  whispering, maddening manner:

“He can’t say that…that’s not right…what the…”

Again and anon he is getting riled.  Our leading department first class petty officer was the Martin to QM2’s Lewis. 

“Dave…keep it down…quiet…that is the XO!!” (not sure if you can use explanation points when you whisper…but it was certainly implied.

Our intrepid leader, XO, kept heaping the laudations on the two other departments.

“The Engineers…now what a job back in San Juan…the ship was down, dead and you brought the old girl back from the dead.  Just like Lazarus rising himself!!”  OK…not only does that make little sense, I don’t think he said it that way exactly…but you get the idea.

Dave is continuing his running mumbling discourse with Tony trying to keep him corked.

At this point the XO says:

“This takes us to Operations, really the one department that is not helping out.  If we can get you back on track we MAY actually get some work done”.  Now, Dave is red…and that is not hyperbole…his face is as red as I have ever seen in a human being.

“HE CANNOT SAY THAT!” 

Tony is now pleading with his QM2 to be quiet or at least tone it down.

The XO is relentless…picking apart the department for every infraction going back to the beginning of the trip…just brutal.  Dave is about to pop and his comments reach the XO and the rest of the assembled crew.

XO didn’t even take a breath…in fact it was an impressive display of oration.

Finally…Dave blew:

“YOU CANNOT SAY THAT XO!  I WILL NOT TAKE THIS ANYMORE!  I WANT TO GO HOME!”

Yelling at an XO…any XO is not particularly career enhancing…even with Dave’s peculiarities this was going over the edge.  At best he was going to get a Captain’s Mast…at worst…*shudder*.

And with that…about 50 miles off the south coast of Puerto Rico…Dave walked overboard.  He didn’t jump…just undid a safety chain where the brow attaches and walked over the side into the ocean.

Stunned is not even close to the reaction of the crew…no had ever seen this before…EVER.

The only person not stunned…yes…the XO.  Unnoticed he had walked over to where Dave went into the drink.

XO declared:  “YOU CAN’T GO WITHOUT ME!!” and he too walked overboard.

For those of you with seagoing service experience or just avid sailors…practicing for a man overboard is the most common drill with rote actions and procedures drilled into sailors starting at boot camp or swab summer.

No one moved…there was a bleak “man overboard” call…but that was it.  I mean silence…

Until the Captain…who had also unnoticed, made his way to the bridge and announced:

“Now swim call, swim call.  Swim call authorized on the starboard side.”

It was brilliant.  The only three onboard who knew were the Captain, XO, and Dave.  The crew needed a morale boost and a break.  We got it.  It was clearly a highlight of the trip (remember GTMO lay in our future—but for now this was what we needed).

I consider Fred White the best leader I have served with and a mentor though good times and the most difficult times of my life.

Oh…by the way…while we were getting our bearings Dave and Fred were in the water for at least 10 minutes fully clothed…over the side you could hear Fred say:

“A little help…hey…how about a life ring…HEY…”








Sunday, April 7, 2013

The Night That Didn't Happen



Somewhere in the North Atlantic…(even better than “It was a dark and stormy night”)

Well actually it was the Bahamian Sea which is technically the North Atlantic but somehow doesn’t sound as cool…

The mighty GRAND ISLE was forwardedly deployed to Miami from our homeport, Gloucester.  Our mission (and we had no choice but to accept it) was to support a drug interdiction operation running around the Bahamas.  Now, that may sound like a tip of the spear type endeavor but not so fast my friends.  Our job was to stay covert in a place just south of the Tongue of the Ocean (its real—Google it!!)…we were tasked with doing a BARPAT (fancy term for steaming back and forth along a one trackline…over and over (and over!!) again.  So, not the glamorous patrol I was hoping for this far from home.

This particular patrol started with a trip down the coastline stopping a couple of times along the way for fuel.  The Coast Guard felt that more resources in and around the Seventh District could help stem the tide of illegal drugs.  GRAND ISLE’s normal mission was enforcing  “living marine resources” regulations.  That is a relatively fancy term for fish boardings…making sure that the New England fish stocks…ah what the hell…it’s a boring conversation anyway…

So, GI had been working for a couple of weeks burning holes in the ocean with very little to show for it (during the patrol we had to evade Hurricane Mitch; a whole other sea story for a different day…and really not a funny story at all…actually that would fall under the horror genre if I do say so myself).  We were now pros at the stealth patrol—avoiding contacts—which went against all of my professional instincts. 

This particular evening was OPS NORMAL…so my Chief Engineer and I sat down to drink some coffee, play a little cribbage, and watch Braveheart (pre Mel meltdown).  Right before the first MAJOR battle scene the whole ship experienced a brown out…somewhat eerie I might add but not completely out of the ordinary.  That said my Chief felt it would be solid idea have a quick look in the Engine Room.  So naturally I kept watching the movie…

A good, whole three minutes later I heard one of the main diesel engines just stop…most unsettling.  Chief opened the Engine Room hatch and said he would get this fixed right away…no worries.  I was the Captain so of course I worried my way up to the bridge.  My OOD was suitably concerned and on the sound powered phone with the Engineer of the Watch.

I settled in the Captain’s chair with a cup of coffee and…the second engine shut down.  Not really what I was expecting when Chief had said “No worries”.  In fact I would say this is the exact opposite of no worries.  EDITORIAL NOTE:  Those of you who know me well understand my Zen-like calm that I always exude…ok you can stop laughing now.

So…every instinct says to stay on the bridge and wait for Mick (my Chief) to let me know what is going on…then one of the generators shuts down.  Deep breath now…until…the final generator shut down and then everything else on the ship too…

We have battery back up for a few systems…radar, some radios…that’s about it.  And if we are not inport the batteries are what we use to start…everything: generators and engines.

Now I cannot help myself and head below decks to the engine room to find out what is going on and what I can do.  What I saw was…something less than reassuring.

Mick is standing on one of the generators and his department is running around the engine room with five gallon buckets of diesel fuel.  Not what I was expecting…to say the least. 

Mike looks at me and for the first time since he has been my Engineer he seemed a bit…hmmmm…put off…

“Captain” he started and at this point I knew we might have a slight problem “this is REALLY not the time…get back to the bridge!”

Now, normally as the commanding officer the crew refrained from giving me orders…in this case I felt discretion was the order of the day; I went back to the bridge.

So, we are dead in the water, middle of nowhere, no power, no long range radio and a battery backup that was our only chance to get this righted.  My XO and I discussed every possible option; shutting down all systems, breaking out the flares, getting the EPIRB ready, deploying a sea anchor…but at the end of the day the all came to one conclusion…we were going to have to call the Coast Guard for a tow…lamentations promptly ensued.  I think I said something like:

“I don’t care if we drift until the Second Coming, we are NOT calling another patrol boat for a tow!!!”…something like that…there may have been a few more colorful adjectives, nouns, adverbs….

Waiting…and waiting…for my chief to come up and tell us what happened.

Still waiting…

And…yep…still waiting.

In all actuality it was probably 20 minutes but you get the idea.  I am genetically predisposed with the patience of a 7 year old on Christmas morning.

I hear some doors opening down below and on queue Mick bounds up the ladder to the bridge.  He is not looking optimistic in fact his demeanor is downright downtrodden (can you do that…two consecutive words starting with down?  The world wonders).

By the way Mick is from England so imagine this with an accent.

“Sir…not sure how it happened but we bleed air throughout the whole fuel system.”

What he really said we filled with engineering language (and colorful metaphors) that I did not understand then and certainly can’t remember 15 years later.

“What we need to do is replace one valve and prime fuel into the whole system.  Then, if that works, we light of a generator using the batteries.  If that works we will be fine…if it doesn’t…”  Mick let it hang there knowing what it would mean.  Very calmly I reiterated my desire to avoid calling the Coast Guard for a tow.

Mick got all in place…called to his head mechanic and told him to start one of the generators.  Imagine if you will every horror or action movie when the car NEEDED to start…what happens…the whole theater hears the engine cycle but not turn over.  That’s what we got here…THREE TIMES!

On the fourth try I am doing my best not to have an aneurism on the bridge when the GEN catches and turns over.  Imagine if you will the Ewoks on Endor when DS II explodes…same thing on the bridge of the mighty GRAND ISLE.

With the power from the first generator we light of rest of the systems including the Main Diesel Engines and we amble along our way.  Total time maybe 90 minutes…if that long; felt like a month and a half.

I went down below to talk to Mike…where was he you ask?  With a bag of popcorn, fresh pot of coffee, and Braveheart paused waiting for me.  Before I could ask anything he said:

“Never happened”.

“What?”

“Never happened.”

“You mean tonight?”

“What about tonight?”

“So, I never happened?”

“What didn’t happen?”

And that was The Night that Never Happened aboard GRAND ISLE.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

The Story...



Apr 26 2021: In a wide ranging interview with Griffin “The Griff” Burns, Balto Johnson of The Atlantic reported that a six part documentary is forthcoming on the life and untimely passing of Boomer Dow.  Most people will recall Dow for his time with the Kanine Komets and the 12 championship he brought to the city.  Burns will explore Dow’s on field exploits but will also delve into charitable works heretofore unknown by most fans.  Dow was a long time contributor to Make a Dog Wish as well as, surprisingly, the Miracle Cat Foundation.  Dow’s family worked closely with Burns and provided access to personal letters, diaries, blogs, and photographs – up until now all unpublished.  When asked why come forward with this project now, Dow’s wife Lucy said the 10 year anniversary of his career ending injury seems like the right moment.  Murph Murphy, a long-time friend and mentor, agreed with Lucy and said it was time for the fans to get the full picture of Dow’s legacy.  

 

Boomer: A life, the six part mini-series will air on DBS starting September 15. 

 

Apr 9 2017: Animal Sports Illustrated: Today MLDB Commissioner, Lassie McGruff announced that the Dog Hall of Fame has finally waived the five year waiting period for the former Kanine Komet Boomer Dow’s inclusion on this year’s DOF ballot.  She stated the Hall has finally come to its sense of smell in allowing the most famous, most accomplished, and most beloved player in Dog Ball history to be immediately enshrined.  All dog sports fans are aware of the tragic story of Boomer’s untimely passing in 2014.  After contracting a fatal liver disease Boomer died just days later at world-renowned Taylor Veterinarian Hospital surrounded by family and friends.  The Hall’s announcement is long overdue according to reigning league MVD, Baxter Grant: “It is about time…Boomer was the best in this league for so long, he set the standard for all of us to follow.”  After an emergency meeting of all eligible voters, the tally was unanimous, a first in any Hall voting.  A fitting tribute to the one they called “King Komet.”

 

Apr 6 2013: NEDSN: (New England Dog Sports Network) Today, Kanine Komet super dog-star Boomer Dow announced an end to his Hall of Fame career.  After playing sparingly last year and not being to take the field this season, he stated that he has officially retired.  Immediately following the press conference the Komets announced they have signed Boomer to a lifetime services contact.  Team SVP for Dogball Operations, Old Dan “Doogie” Howser, said he expects Boomer to take the rest of the year off then start as a special assistant to the general manager.  Boomer, best known for his uncanny prowess in the post season, holds more than a dozen single season and career records.  Fans should expect to make reservation to go to Dogstown, NY in 2018 for Boomer’s induction into MLDB’s Hall of Fame.  It is widely assumed that Boomer will be the first inductee with 100% of the vote.  The previous high was Rin Tin Tin, Sr of the Chicago Springer’s with 96% way back in 1941.

 

Sept 15 2011: WDOG: Boston's premier all Dog Sports radio channel, had an exclusive interview on the Big Show today with Boomer Dow's super-agent Jeff "El Jefe" Moondog.  Moondog said that Boomer's rehab will be more extensive than initially expected and there is a chance this is a career ending surgery.  When pressed if he was admitting that Boomer was done with the Komets, the agent, known as the Chief, said nothing is impossible with an athlete of Boomer's ability.

 

Sept 14 2011, BREAKING SPORTS NEWS: Sam "Spot" McTavish of the Timberwolf Times is reporting that Boomer Dow's back right knee was more damaged than previous tests indicated. The staff at Taylor Veterinary Hospital stated the procedure was a success and Boomer is resting comfortably. He will be released early Wednesday morning. When asked for a reaction to Spot's assertion, Komet's general manager issued a terse "No Comment".

 

August 21 2011, Sunday Diamond Notes: MLDB (Major League Dogball) continues to react to Boomer Dow's first trip to the DL. Legendary New York Yorkies slugger Rover Korowski said this of intra-division rival: "We started out as fierce competitors, but over the last decade I would say we have developed a true mutual respect." The Yorks and Komets have met for the MLDB AL Pennant six times in the past 10 years with the Komets winning five times.

 

August 18 2011: The Kanine Komets announced today that future Hall of Famer Boomer Dow, will have season ending ACL surgery on Sept 13 at the famed Taylor Veterinary Clinic in Cedar Falls, IA. While disappointed that his season is over, Boomer told Boston Retriever columnist Mutt O'Leary that the 90-day post-op rehab should allow him to fully participate in the 2012 spring training in Dog Wood Beach, FL. Boomer holds many single season and career batting records.

 

July 13 2011: Boomer Dow (future Hall of Famer from the Kanine Komets) said his knee had not improved since last week's announcement but he will be back for next year. Boomer is the all-time leader in homeruns, RBIs, and tail wags. He is also noted for his 2006 campaign where he set the single season record for Sleeping During the Day (SDD) percentage of .856--a mark that will most likely never be topped.

 

July 9 2011: In a subsequent press release the Kanine Komets announced that future Hall of Famer Boomer Dow will undergo two weeks of physical therapy prior to any decision regarding surgery on his injured ACL. Renowned orthopedist Dr. Rin Tin Tin, III (grandson of MLDB Hall of Famer, Rin Tin Tin, Sr) will evaluate Boomer on Monday to try to determine the extent of the injury. At this point, it is assumed that surgery is the likely choice but the Komet’s want to evaluate all options. Dr. Tin has rescued the careers of both Bingo, Lassie, and Marmaduke.

 

July 8 2011: in a major setback to the Kanine Komet’s championship hopes it was reported today that star pooch Boomer Dow has a blown left, rear ACL and is on the 14 day DL. It is likely that he will need season ending surgery. When asked for comment Komet’s owner, Jeff Dow, teared up and simply uttered the single word: "Tragic".