OSQAB – Life Raft Drill

22 11 2025

The course that all of us navy types had to take. This course was supposed to teach us everything about how to be a sailor in 2 months – I think it was 2 months, I could be wrong, my memory retrieval system is a little fuzzy these days.

Our course instructor was a decent enough person and so my journey to becoming a sailor began. There was the marching as a group, the short time for lunches, the yada yada yada about the history of the navy…… a lot of boring stuff that we needed to know.

One of the two really interesting parts of this course was life raft drills. For anyone who has been on a ferry or other passenger vessel, you have probably seen the inflatable life raft containers secured out on the upper deck. They are a 6 foot long by 3 foot in diameter fiber glass tube. The theory is that if the ship goes down, these things will automatically release from their brackets, rise to the surface and self inflate. While theory is a wonderful thing, it is always good to actually see it work and know that you actually can use it properly.

This is how they actually work. A hydrostatic release device connects the life raft securing straps to the ship. There is also a 20 foot long line, called a painter, that one end is tied to the ships deck, the other end goes into the life raft container and is connected to a pin. When the ship sinks and gets to about 20 feet underwater, the hydrostatic release device lets go and the life raft floats to the surface. Once the life raft is 20 feet away from the sinking ship, the painter is pulled taught and the pin gets pulled free. That pin triggers a carbon dioxide canister to discharge and then the life raft inflates.

The fun part of this lesson is that we actually get thrown into a pool, trigger the life raft to inflate and then get into the raft from the water. The last part isn’t quite as easy as it appears. The other drill we were taught is how to right the raft if it inflates upside down, again, not as easy as it appears.

Once the powers to be were satisfied that we knew what they wanted us to know, we were treated to a lovely movie, made sometime in the 60’s by the Royal Navy about what to do when your ship decides to decorate the sea floor. A very stirring performance in which a group of 20 sailors survive for a couple of days on the high seas, with only the instruction book, some good old British naval discipline and a deck of cards. It is amazing what you can do with a standard deck of playing cards.

Next story – Fire Fighting/Damage Control





CFB Naden – The first Monday

20 11 2025

Got up, showered, shaved, dressed in my very best, went to breakfast and at 0800 I reported to the Ships Office at Nelles Block.
“Who are you? What, you weren’t supposed to be here until day after tomorrow.”
Well isn’t that all fine and good, like what do you want me to do about that? Later in my career I found that it was not uncommon for you to be told to report somewhere on a specific date and when you got there, they weren’t expecting you, ah well, on with the story.

I handed in my piles of paperwork and was handed back a bunch more to start filling out, seriously it took close to an hour just for me to fill out all of the pieces of paper they wanted. When I left the office I had a real room, with a real bed and only 1 room mate, a meal card and directions on how to find the Base Manual Party(BMP). I was told that my OSQAB course (how to be a sailor) was starting next Monday, until then I get to do all sorts of make work projects.
Working for BMP was pretty easy and to be honest I didn’t actually do a whole lot for that first week. Heck, I even caught up on 10 weeks of sleep deprivation.

During that week of BMP, I found the holiest place on the base. No, not the chapel, the parade square.
One does not cross the parade square, ever. If you must get to the other side you go around the perimeter.
The Base Chief, a man you definitely do not want to get on the wrong side of, has an office that over looks the parade square.
Whoa be it you should the Chief see you on his parade square. You will hear hear his displeasure instantly, and so will the base Commanding Officer whose office is on the other side of the parade square. After the initial outrage passes, you will then spend time being marched across the parade square after the working day is done. I was witness to someone who forgot about the holy space, it was not pretty.

One week later, it was time to learn how to become a sailor…….





CFB Naden – West Coast Bound

19 11 2025

Friday, week 10 at CFB Cornwallis.
I had graduated basic training, I was a real live member of the Canadian Armed Forces.
Now what?
I had been given an envelope with a whole lot of paperwork and my plane tickets to the West Coast. I was told to report to Ships Office at Nelles Block, Monday morning at 0800.
And that was that.

I got on the plane, had a layover in Toronto, and then to Victoria International Airport. A 45 minutes taxi ride from the airport to Nelles Block at CFB Naden. I think it was something stupid o’clock on Saturday morning by the time I arrived. I marched up to a desk and said “I am here”. The look I got back was very clearly “and I should care why?”. They hadn’t been expecting me until Monday morning, that meant they didn’t have a place for me to sleep, they didn’t have my meal card ready and to top it all off it was raining. I was given a temporary ration card and pointed at the mess hall and told lunch was 1100 to 1400. They then decided that if I was going to eat there, I should sleep there so they sent me down to the basement in what was called Transient Quarters. A bunk, a foot locker and and a stand up locker. It was enough to store all of my kit until Monday morning.

After I got settled in I made my way to the mess hall and…..
Just walked in. No marching, no waiting for the senior classes to go first, no one yelling at me. After 10 weeks of recruit school, this was heaven. I got my tray and was asked what I wanted and they made it for me. What a mind fuck that was. I didn’t have someone timing how long I was there, I didn’t have to inhale it, I went up for seconds….
Bliss
If this is what being in the Navy was all about, I could see myself doing the full 20 years for a pension.

My delusions where shattered Monday morning.
I still did my 20 though, if you have come this far in my journal, hang on tight, there is a lot more to come.
Now it gets interesting








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