Navy Days: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
:[[Klaw_RCR|Read story about Robin and Klaw photography]] | :[[Klaw_RCR|Read story about Robin and Klaw photography]] | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
In | In 1960, we took the '''[[USS Robert L. Wilson]] (DD-847)''' "out of the yards" at Norfolk. In Jan 1961, on a trip to the Caribbean, we were diverted to '''[[Recife]],''' Brazil. Our Task Group was chasing the '''[[SS Santa Maria]]''', a [[ship]] taken over by a group of Portuguese separatists. (The book below was written about our 'exploits'.) We were the first American ships to visit since WWII. Using the phone book, I found a modeling studio and paid them a visit. The American dollar went a very LONG way that weekend! (Visiting foreign countries and making friends, oh boy!) | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
{{Nexus:Recife}} | {{Nexus:Recife}} | ||
Later, the Wilson made a Med Cruise, all the while [[teaching]] English (or was it "la vice Anglais"?) and showing them the ropes. | Later, the Wilson made a Med Cruise, all the while [[teaching]] English (or was it "la vice Anglais"?) and showing them the ropes. | ||
<gallery> | <gallery mode="packed" heights="200px" caption=""> | ||
image:ETSN.jpg|<center>Graduation<br>from ET School</center> | image:ETSN.jpg|<center>Graduation<br>from ET School</center> | ||
image:Dd847_04a.jpg|<Center>The "Willie Boat" in port</center> | image:Dd847_04a.jpg|<Center>The "Willie Boat" in port</center> | ||
Line 25: | Line 24: | ||
image:Dd847-59a.jpg|<Center>Underway replenishment during a storm</center> | image:Dd847-59a.jpg|<Center>Underway replenishment during a storm</center> | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
<gallery> | {{Nexus:WestPac}} | ||
image:Ddr874_vol2a.jpg| | <gallery mode="packed" heights="200px" caption=""> | ||
image:Cg-11a.jpg| | image:Ddr874_vol2a.jpg|The Duncan | ||
image:Cg-11a.jpg|Commissioning Day aboard the Chicago | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
My second tour of duty was quite different. Since I spoke a fair amount of Japanese, I was transferred to the '''[[USS Duncan]]''' (DDR-874)] homeported in Yokosuka, Japan. We made port calls all over the Western Pacific, including Hong Kong, and I made a side trip to Singapore. This allowed for a fair amount of in-port time, and I was able to spend time traveling around Japan, making friends, and learning the various Japanese styles of bondage. (I find it interesting that although we did a fair amount of bondage, we never used the title "Shibari.") | My second tour of duty was quite different. Since I spoke a fair amount of Japanese, I was transferred to the '''[[USS Duncan]]''' (DDR-874)] homeported in Yokosuka, Japan. We made port calls all over the Western Pacific, including Hong Kong, and I made a side trip to Singapore. This allowed for a fair amount of in-port time, and I was able to spend time traveling around Japan, making friends, and learning the various Japanese styles of bondage. (I find it interesting that although we did a fair amount of bondage, we never used the title "Shibari.") | ||
<br><br> | <br><br> |
Revision as of 11:12, 24 January 2022
Use {{pm}} instead of {{pmheader}}
"Navy Days"
When I joined the Navy in 1957, I went through "Boot Camp" at Great Lakes, Ill. I often visited a "friend" of my family who lived in Chicago, who introduced me to the largest Polish family I had ever seen. I spent a fair amount of my "Liberty Time" teaching the girls of Chicago about the joys of being tightly bound and "forced" to enjoy themselves.
After "boots", I was transferred to Electronics and Electricity Prep School (E&E Prep) and then to Electronics Technician Class A (ET"A") and ET "C" schools. This meant I spent nearly two years in schools at Great Lakes during the week and Chicago homes on weekends. (Later on, I studied radar, radio, sonar electronics; cryptography; ship damage control; search and rescue; fire fighting; and the use of explosives.)
I was transferred to CinCLantFltNorVa (Commander-in-Chief, Atlantic Fleet in Norfolk, VA). A lot of free time allowed for travel all along the Atlantic coast. On one trip to New York to see the sights and visit friends, I spent a weekend with someone who worked for Irving Klaw. That trip changed my life: the friend introduced me to a career as a 'Professional Bondage Photography'.
In 1960, we took the USS Robert L. Wilson (DD-847) "out of the yards" at Norfolk. In Jan 1961, on a trip to the Caribbean, we were diverted to Recife, Brazil. Our Task Group was chasing the SS Santa Maria, a ship taken over by a group of Portuguese separatists. (The book below was written about our 'exploits'.) We were the first American ships to visit since WWII. Using the phone book, I found a modeling studio and paid them a visit. The American dollar went a very LONG way that weekend! (Visiting foreign countries and making friends, oh boy!)
Nexus: Recife, Brazil |
---|
The following articles are related to "Recife, Brazil" as their nexus
|
Later, the Wilson made a Med Cruise, all the while teaching English (or was it "la vice Anglais"?) and showing them the ropes.
Nexus: WestPac |
---|
The following articles are related to "WestPac Cruise"
|
My second tour of duty was quite different. Since I spoke a fair amount of Japanese, I was transferred to the USS Duncan (DDR-874)] homeported in Yokosuka, Japan. We made port calls all over the Western Pacific, including Hong Kong, and I made a side trip to Singapore. This allowed for a fair amount of in-port time, and I was able to spend time traveling around Japan, making friends, and learning the various Japanese styles of bondage. (I find it interesting that although we did a fair amount of bondage, we never used the title "Shibari.")
I was later transferred to the USS Chicago (CG-11) as a member of the pre-commissioning crew in San Francisco. I worked aboard ship during the day, but I was spending free time at my home parents' Sunnyvale.
After commissioning, the Chicago transferred to southern CA. On a weekend trip to visit friends in Palmdale, I met Connie, who became my first wife.
When the USS Chicago went to WestPac, I was transferred to the Fleet Anti-Aircraft Training Center {FAAWTC) in San Diego. Connie and I got married.
As I traveled with the Navy, I continually honed my bondage skills while making new friends.
In 1966, when I got out of the Navy, I had dozens and dozens of friends from around the world who were interested in bondage. He started a small 'newsletter' (some issues even had bondage photos) to keep everyone informed of 'things bondage'. Those first newsletters were printed on a teletypewriter using a paper-tape reader with pictures sent as photographic prints. (Several newsletters were actually sent as 8 x 10 photographic prints.) He found that a lot of my photographer friends were looking for models, and vice-versa. He was asked by a lot of friends were asking that he teach bondage techniques and, as they say, "The BackDrop Club was formed".
"Sea Stories" (NOT!) |
Links to Duty Stations: |
What links here • References and Sources • Help • Contact info • Category:Root ⤴