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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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We must have just missed each other. I was a regular to Masirah 1965-67 (Argosy) and then circa 1972-74 (Hercules). We captains used to love to wind up the young impressible co-pilots with tales of the “Golden Slipper” in downtown Masirah. You must have witnessed the arrival of the Turtles at certain seasons/ tides. .... yes Jack, many *genuinely* happy memories of that rather bleak place on the route to the Far East. I won't bore everyone here with too many, but the turtles as you say were worth the tour alone - both the "mums" clambering up the beach to lay, and the later hatching for a return to the sea: we used to go down and try and help some reach the water line and also discourage too much predation, though to be honest, at that time the whole thing seemed quite sustainable without too much help from us! As a rather naive sort, I had several shocks on my initial flight out to Masirah: first, I should have realised I suppose that if you're told to report to RAF Lyneham, you ain't going to fly out on a VC10! A C-130 is a wonderful aircraft, and if you've got something to do with flying the thing at the front, or otherwise supporting the work, the time probably goes alright. If you're a passenger for hour after hour in a webbing seat up at the back, first to Cyprus (Akro) then via the old CENTO route over Turkey, Iran and the Gulf, the novelty wears off - quickly! And then of course, this green-behind-the-ears type didn't fully appreciate (and dear old Met O 10 down at Eastern Road didn't exactly emphasise), that this was a war zone! The route was strictly Akrotiri - Masirah, but a little diversion to Salalah (planned or not I don't know), was 'interesting'. The aircraft taxied back into the protection of the blast wall, the doors opened (hot, suffocating desert air flowed in - fag-end of the NE monsoon season), and the ALM said " run like hell for the shelter ", before a loud explosion was heard - very close by! The rebels were lobbing mortars at anything that moved - and we had recently been moving. It wasn't until many years afterwards, when I read the autobiography of Sir Peter De La Billiere (SAS before he was Gulf War commander), that I fully realised just how chancy things were down that end of Oman - needless to say, an 'interesting' time. Martin. -- Martin Rowley West Moors, East Dorset (UK): 17m (56ft) amsl Lat: 50.82N Long: 01.88W NGR: SU 082 023 |
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