Saturday, February 16, 2013

I now pronounce you…

After living in Perth for more than four years, we finally reached one of the big milestones of migration.  We attended a citizenship ceremony at Wanneroo city and were formally pronounced to be Australian citizens.

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A multicultural group of people started lining up at 5pm and slowly entered the room where the ceremony was going to be held.

People were divided into groups of about 14 or 15 at a time and then repeated the words

From this time forward, under God,
I pledge my loyalty to Australia and its people,
whose democratic beliefs I share,
whose rights and liberties I respect, and
whose laws I will uphold and obey.

At the end of this pledge, the deputy mayor would say

“I now pronounce you Australian citizens.” 

We found this a little funny because you keep on expecting the words “…man and wife” to follow the first part of the phrase!

So, here we are.  Five years ago I started investigating the options of moving abroad and started applying for jobs in Australia.  I prepared heaps of paperwork and spent thousands of dollars during this whole process.  This included:

  • Applying for unabridged birth certificates, which meant I had to travel to different towns in Namibia and South Africa because the lines of applicants in Windhoek were already snaking out into the street at 7 in the morning.
  • Applying for Namibian Police clearance – a minimum processing time of four months and only valid for 6 months…
  • Applying for our South African unabridged marriage certificate
  • Getting my Engineering degree recognized by Engineers Australia.
  • Applying for Military release forms from the SA Defence force.
  • Going for expensive medical tests for the Permanent Residence application
  • Writing the IETLS language exams
  • Writing a citizenship test
  • Being forced to do a practical drivers licence assessment even though I come from a country where we also drive on the left hand side of the road – even though Americans (who drive on the wrong side) do not have to do an assessment!
  • Leaving Australia for ten days to get our permanent residence approved.

The list is not comprehensive but what I can say is that every action, every dollar, every major obstacle I had to overcome was worth it.

Advance Australia Fair.

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Saturday, July 7, 2012

Finding Bigfoot

Lately I’ve been watching episodes of a series on Animal Planet called “Finding Bigfoot”.  It’s a painful experience, but somehow I keep on watching – hoping that maybe one day they’ll actually find the ugly bugger.

These folks hang around in the woods at night making howling noises and growling and hitting trees with sticks, all in the hope of getting a reply from Ol’ Bigfoot.

They have wild theories about what kind of food these things eat, where they like to sleep and what their favourite baseball team is. 

None of these theories have been based on any facts though.

These blokes walk around in the middle of the night wearing night vision goggles, thermal cameras and all sorts of paraphernalia.

 

They try the weirdest tricks, from leaving a baby doll crying in the woods to setting up massive fireworks in the middle of the night.  None of this has attracted any major “Sasquatch” attention. 

They refer to so-called “sasquatch behaviour” like experienced scientists, you’d swear they actually lived in a sasquatch community before becoming humans. They expertly inform the public of bigfoot traditions and culture as if it’s actually been proven.  They even have a “Bigfoot Field Researchers Organisation”, which of course is not biased towards the existence of Bigfoot at all.

The funniest part is when they declare an area as “very squatchy” - with eyes wild open, like that actually means something. 

It also doesn’t help that one of these blokes calls himself “Bobo” …

They go around talking to thousands of so-called eye-witnesses.  Some of these even have videos or photos to “prove” what they saw.  Of course, the videos are always grainy and badly focussed – almost as bad as real UFO footage.

After watching endless footage of green night-vision and thermal camera shots of people howling in the woods, I still haven’t seen one single piece of evidence that even slightly points to the existence of this huge 8 foot animal.

So far all that they have found were coyotes and bears and crazy hunters with shotguns walking the woods at night.

I’m starting to develop my own conspiracy-theory.  Maybe the government is hiding evidence of Bigfoot because they know that the public would realise that their politicians were all bred in captivity and raised by huge monsters that look like Robert Mugabe, training them to take over the planet and abuse tax payers funds.

But there is good news.  This week a bunch of nerdy blokes announced that they managed to capture a terrorist called Higgs Boson.  They trapped him in a 27km long tunnel and they are going to publish photos of him soon. 

I’m sure these guys will be able to find Bigfoot.  Just bring along that Hadron Collider thingy – install it in the woods and presto, Mr Bigfoot will soon be appearing on the front page of the Times next to his buddy Mugabe.

Why am I always the first to think of these things?

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Send in the clowns

Years ago, when kings and queens still ruled, they used to have clowns at their disposal.  The job of the clown was to entertain the royal family, and maybe even entertain the common folk too.

If the clown wasn’t funny or talented enough, he would lose his head.

In modern days, however, there is a new system.  In order for the queen to have any legitimacy in the eyes of the public, she has to reduce herself to the lower level and share a stage with a bunch of clowns.

The Clowns make a mockery of the Queen and everyone wants to see the show because the clowns are going to be there. 

The Queen has no celebrity status if she is not endorsed by these dope-smoking hippies with their silly clown suits and crappy hairstyles.

The truth of the matter is that nowadays the clowns are the rulers – they rule the crowds, they dictate even to the royal family and they have more assets than the British monarchy can ever dream of.  They also have less rules to live by – they pretty much do as they like, and no matter how immoral or inhuman their lifestyle, it is always regarded as cool and trendy. 

The old queen hangs around like a piece of furniture for the Clowns to display.

Oh, and did I mention the silly hats that those red-coated guards wear?  Maybe the queen doesn’t notice the freaks on her stage, because she is used to being surrounded by jokers in clownish costumes like this one:

If I paid someone to guard my life, I’d make sure he could see where he was going, and I’d want to be able to see if he was awake - this bloke is probably sleeping on the job?

Saturday, June 2, 2012

RAAF Airshow

A few weekends ago we managed to squeeze all the kids into the car and head of the RAAF air show at Pearce Air base just North of Perth.

As we headed down Gnangara road, the traffic seemed a little slow, but not too bad.  Once we got onto West Swan, however, it was worse than the freeway during rainy weather.  Every man and his dog was heading to the air show.

As we got to the junction with the Great Northern Highway (which in all honesty is not that great…), it was amazing to see that an obese oversized truck was taking up both lanes and crawling in the direction of Bullsbrook – exactly where every man and his dog was also heading. 

How the authorities managed to approve an abnormal vehicle permit on a day like this, only they will know.  What arrogant mining company decided that their next big toy being slithered all the way to the Pilbara is soooo important that even the air show can wait?  For the first time I’m thinking that maybe the Labor government’s Mining Tax is not such a bad idea – surely then Muss Gillahd will pay for a freeway to Bullsbrook and these iron-ore crooks can pay the penalty for holding us back from a great day of entertainment.

After crawling behind an old man who was doing 60 in a 90 zone in Gnangara road, I suddenly realised that I had nothing to complain about back then.

Off course by now the kids were asking “are we there yet?”…

When we got to vicinity of the air show, we could already see planes flying around and helicopters thudding over us.  This was already way cool and I struggled to keep my eyes on the road.  My dad would have loved this – he always swerved around on the road whenever he saw or heard a plane – he loved looking at planes and for brief moments couldn’t care less about where the white line or the road shoulder was.

We were finally showed where to park, and immediately realised that we would have to lock the car’s position in a GPS, otherwise we would never find it in the “mother of all parking lots”.  There were thousands of vehicles parked in straight rows for kilometres long.

Arriving at the gate I was really glad that I had already purchased my tickets online, because the ticket line was almost as long as the toilet lines.  It was just around noon and there were still millions of cars waiting behind us somewhere on the Little Northern highway – but we were IN!

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Needless to say the kids were already asking when they were getting fed, and looking at the feeding lines I thought it might be easier to kill a stranger and eat his food.  There were long lines (almost as long as the blue toilet cubicle lines), and I was seriously doubting the ability of those poor cooks to feed all these people.

In the meanwhile we started looking at some planes, and I forgot all about food and dead strangers.

Amazing, is all I can say.  I’m not one of those blokes who can ramble on and on about every plane’s name rank and serial number, but I do enjoy looking at these bad boys.

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The highlight of course was the F18 Super Hornets.  Need I say more?  These things take off on a short bit of runway and then head straight up into the sky in a vertical position – freaky.

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The guns on the Hawk trainers were displayed in one of the hangers, and I took quite an interest in these. This barrel is a 30mm monster, and you sure don’t want to be at the receiving end of it.  Not quite the hunting tool, as it would mess up too much good meat:

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We finally managed to get food and drink at highly inflated prices, and settled on our little picnic blanket.

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They also had a display of vintage cars nearby which my son and I enjoyed while the girls went looking for a blue cubicle.

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By the time the kids had eaten, the Hornet flybys had finished and they wanted to go home.  Go figure.  There were still heaps of aeroplanes that I had not yet inspected on a closer level, but the missus and the kids had enough of a fun day in the sun, and we were soon heading back home. 

The parking lot was – well – a parking lot, and it took about half an hour just to reach the exit, while hoons with 4x4’s thought they owned the road and passed people in the most selfish and idiotic ways imaginable.  Probably South African expats from Joburg, if you ask me...

All in all, a great day except for the traffic. 

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Friday, March 16, 2012

Speedqueen repair

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Our trusty old Speedqueen hasn’t given us one day of worries for over 14 years.  This machine was designed in the USA, most of the parts were made in the USA, and I believe it was assembled in South Africa, but it may even have been assembled in the good ol’ US of A. 

Designed and built to last forever – nothing like the crap you get these days that is assembled in China or Bangladesh, quality checked by a person who can barely write his own name and is paid $2 a day by the communist regime who are stuffing themselves with caviar and turtle eggs. 

No sirree, this baby was made by western people in the old-fashioned proud way that westerners used to display not so long ago.  A pride that seems to have disappeared overnight.

My wife and I bought this machine in Namibia just after we got married.  It travelled to different houses and although it’s a massive machine, it’s worth dragging her big fat body to your new house.  Once she gets going, she’ll wash anything you can stuff into her.

We brought her over to Australia in a 40 foot container.  She spent 5 months inside that container before being able to drink her first serving of Australian water.  And she happily soldiered on - washing clothes, blankets, barbeque covers, car carpets, shoes and anything else that could fit in there.

Until two days ago, when she started screaming like a pig.

I gave her a few pushes and shoves and managed to wiggle her fat body around until the noise sort of went away.  But a few seconds later the noise would return, even though she seemed to do her job despite the screaming noise.  It sounded like someone threw a bag of coins inside a food processor.  (Not that I’d ever done that and would know what it sounded like…)

I guess the noise should have made me think about opening her carcass to see what was causing it, but I just somehow managed to convince myself that “she’ll be right.”  

So yesterday, of course, my worried wife told me that the machine wasn’t working any more.  What would we do without her?

Which led to today’s event.

Armed with my toolbox, socket sets, screwdrivers, and a multimeter which hasn’t been used for more than 3 years, I had my battle plan ready.

The first job was to get all the water out of the machine.  She was full of water but could not pump it out herself – which made me think that the pump might be where the problem was.

I opened her up, and at first I saw a lot of black fluff which I immediately though to be the kind of black stuff you see when a motor burns out.  This wasn’t a happy moment for me.

On closer inspection, though, I noted that this stuff was just fluff from 14 years of washing.  Somehow some of this stuff does end up on the inside of the machine, and no one ever thinks of opening up her guts and cleaning her out, so where else would the fluff go?

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I tested the power to the pump, and measured that it was receiving power but was still not running. 

To remove the pump, I had to disconnect the water feed, which meant that the last bit of water that I couldn’t get out of the machine would drain all over me.  Being alone with no extra hands to help, this created quite an annoying situation where my bucket was filling up quicker than I could empty it, and I desperately had to fight to keep water from running into the electrical parts of the machine.  Fun times, indeed.

I finally dismounted the pump and saw something moving inside.

And there it is – a hairpin:

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This stupid hairpin was causing all the havoc and was obviously the source of the noise.  When I wiggled and bounced the machine around, the hairpin dislodged a little, but would soon go back into it’s position and cause the screaming noise.  Eventually the pump just couldn’t turn anymore.

The good news was that once I returned everything back into position, I filled up the machine with water and she pumped that water out like Victoria Falls after a good raining season.

What a lucky escape – our baby is still running smoothly, and I saved hundreds of dollars on a repairman that would almost certainly have claimed that the pump was broken and needed replacement.

Of course, after closing the machine and tightening all the freaking screws, I found that the plastic cover that protects the pump inside the machine was still lying on the floor.  Luckily, this time I knew that I only needed to open the front cover and did not have to waste my time screwing off all the sides too.

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The clean cover re-installed above the pump:

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Mr Fix-it saved the day again. Not to mention the fact that those hard-to-get-to areas inside the machine have been cleaned for the first time in 14 years.

I have to say, I’m still impressed by the quality and durability of this machine.  This was money well spent – many years ago.

Friday, March 2, 2012

How to move stuff all by yourself

We recently moved house and had a bunch of friends who helped.  But after they left we still had to sort out some of our junk that needs to be thrown away/sold/given away.

As I was alone at home this morning, I made a little plan to move these massive bookshelves by myself.

I constructed a combination of the normal stand-up moving trolley and a cheap little cart that my wife used years ago when she distributed pamphlets for a little extra income.  The bookshelf was just too big to be pulled along with the blue trolley.

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This is the bookshelf standing upright in the trolley, before I lowered it down on it’s side.

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My next move was to lower it on it’s side so that the wheels still support one end.  Now I stuck the little cart underneath the trolley’s other end, and tied a rope to the end.

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Now it was easy to pull the massive piece of wood all the way around the house.  Too easy.

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

My Bush War Story (Part 3)

As we reached the end of our school career, it was time for our final exams, and once the exams were over we were all on our way to a place called Henties bay – one of SWA’s favourite holiday destinations at the coast. Youngsters were getting drunk all over the place, doing the usual schoolies thing. We drove a Land Rover on the beach and broke off fishermen’s lines in the process – nasty, but lots of fun for a bunch of young hooligans.

The poor little town suffered heavily under the assault of the school-leavers. Drunken people everywhere, mischief being committed all over the place. Those of us who knew we were soon to join the army, were celebrating like it could be our last time. After all, by this time next year we may have seen the pointy end of an AK47 bullet, and there would be no more celebrations. The others were just starting the free life of a student and were happy as can be, but those of us who were destined for greater things were not quite so optimistic about our future. I was never one to drink too much, but some of my mates got heavily sick during that weekend.

The date was approaching quickly – 11 January 1988.

We celebrated Christmas at our house in Windhoek. I think this was probably the last time our whole family celebrated Christmas together – my grandfather, my aunt and cousins, and us. After this everything changed and the family was never quite the same again.

On the eve of 10 January 1988, I slept in my old bed for the last time, wondering what was lying ahead for me. Did I pack enough shoe polish? Am I fit enough to handle this? I had no idea what my life would be like in 2 years’ time, and certainly no idea of how the political landscape in southern Africa and Eastern Europe would also change in the not-too-distant future.

We arrived at Suiderhof army base, and I looked out for my old school buddies. We were all bundled together with our “civvy bags”, listening to some general making a speech. At that time, I wasn’t too sure about what his rank was - he could have been a corporal, admiral or Intergalactic High Commander for all I cared. He was making lovely promises to our parents. He informed us all that there was nothing to worry about – the enemy was basically already on its knees, and we were in the hands of good people. Mommy and Daddy were told to go home with a happy heart, as these little kids would be well looked after. After all, more people died from sickness and disease than from engaging in war-games.

I was actually starting to believe that the modern army of 1988 might be different – these were modern times after all, and we were the cream of South West African civilization. No harm would come our way.

We were bundled into busses, waving at mom and dad, chatting happily, and generally feeling a little better about this whole deal. (Subconsciously we all knew we were lying to ourselves, but we needed something to hold on to…)

The busses took off, with no corporals or sergeant majors in sight. The only military person in the whole bus was the driver, and he didn’t seem to be much of a problem. The boys were having a good time. Some of the Baster boys in the back of the bus were throwing around Coke cans and emptied chips packets.

We were different from the South Africans in this way. In South Africa, different races did not mix. In SWA, we were enlisted together with people from other races. We all shared the same bus, the same toilets and showers and sometimes even the same water bottles. Many South Africans don’t understand this. The SWATF was a multicultural army, not a segregated army like the SADF was. We were not fighting the black man in Africa – we were fighting communism. Sadly, the current government of Namibia also does not recognise this fact.

Anyway, we soon reached a lovely little isolated place called Luiperdsvallei, just a few kilometers south of Windhoek. We were slowly dragging our civvy bags from the bus, when suddenly it felt like the atmosphere changed drastically.

It’s quite difficult to describe the next scene – it’s a little bit like the movie scenes from the Normandy beach landings, where there is this eerie silence, and suddenly all hell breaks loose around you. Or the choppers landing in Vietnam – nothing happens and then suddenly it’s just bullets, explosions and swear words all over the place. This was a little bit like that – only worse.

I was soon realising that something was happening outside the bus. The closer you got to the bus door at the front, the louder the noise became, and the more panic was felt in the air. There was a tangible feeling of trouble in the air.

Once I reached the exit and my feet touched the ground, I realised that I made the biggest mistake of my life. There was no turning around, and apparently I signed up to join the devil in hell.

A staff-sergeant was standing right at the door, and he was the most vile thing I had ever seen in my life. He started swearing at me even before my feet touched the ground. “Go there, get going you useless #&^%!”, he indicated and pointed in some general direction where I could see only a cloud of dust. I grabbed my civvy bags and started running in that general direction. We all had to line up – we knew about lining up in three’s, because we had been doing this since we were 12. Not to mention that I was also in the school’s prestige platoon in my days.

The staff (this is what we called a staff-seargent) and his big massive moustache appeared in front of us, swearing profanely. Apparently, this was the mark of any good staff – his moustache had to appear on the parade ground a few seconds before he did. They would wear them in these long curly fashions – greased up by eating fatty ribs over the weekend.

This man was yelling obscenities that I’d never heard before. At first I thought he was a preacher – he talked a lot about God and Jesus, and mentioned a lot of horrible sinners like whores and prostitutes, but he wasn’t using these words in quite the same way as our dear Reverend used them on Sundays. Mother Mary and a whorehouse featured heavily in this discussion.

I was made to believe that we were fighting the antichrist, and now suddenly the Devil himself was standing here insulting me! I was ready to grab a gun and kill this swine. He was doing all the things that my parents used to warn me against – and more.

The old dog seemed to be pretty upset, too. I was listening to him rambling on, trying to find out what he was complaining about.

It was about the bus – yep, those lovely people who littered all over the bus were not going to get away with it! That was another thing of course – how dare we, mere raw troops, arrive at a pristine military base riding in a BUS? All the “old troops” in the base were making comments about this – why are we being ferried along in busses, are we too scared to be transported like cattle on the back of a troop carrier? (As if this was our own choice – I didn’t want to be here in the first place!)

Staff Swears-a-lot wanted to know who littered junk all over his bus. No one had any idea. He swore a bit more, until one of the blokes mentioned something like “those bloody Basters did it”. The staff did not appreciate the fact that people were talking while he was swearing, and became even angrier. Now he wanted to know who that was? Who talked? – We were all dead quiet by now.

He started chasing us all around the place, dragging our civvy bags along. Luckily I was prepared for this and had a fairly portable bag. Some of these poor idiots were however dragging themselves to death with heavy impractical suitcases.

Fortunately for us, someone else now appeared on the scene. He seemed to outrank the staff and told him to stop harassing us. Apparently we had not yet been medically tested and it was illegal to chase us around if we were not medically cleared for heavy abuse. What if one of us was a wimp and fell over or died during our lovely interrogation session?

The staff was now even angrier. As we entered the door at the big medical shed, he would say “if you’re classified as G1K1 when you walk out the other side, I will kill you today – you’d better pray you’re not G1K1!!”

By this time it was my life mission to be classified as G5K5. We quickly learnt what these terms meant: G1K1 is a normal fit healthy young man – basically qualified to be abused in any way by anyone who outranks him, and used as canon-fodder. Someone who was blind, deaf, dumb and paralysed below the legs might just get classified as G2K2 – if he was lucky.

Once I got into the shed, I quickly realised that things were going from bad to worse. We had to take off all our clothes except for our underpants. One of my school mates had a beautiful older sister who was always very nice to me when I visited their house. She had in the meanwhile gone to a little town called George, where the female army training facilities were, and she was now an officer in the army. Just my luck – here she was in the same shed where I was standing in my underpants like a prisoner of war. I was embarrassed beyond recognition, and my best attempts at avoiding her did not work.

They performed a check-up on everything – they felt the size of your balls, they measured your length, height and width, and looked into every possible cavity that you could present. The dentist had a look in my mouth and declared my teeth as some of the best he’d seen that day. Some of the other blokes were not that lucky – if they found problems with your teeth, they fixed you there and then, and you could hear the bewildered groans from the poor fellas who were being mutilated under local anaesthesia.

What a day. We’d been here for barely a few hours, and already it was every man for himself – survival of the fittest. Except for the fact that you tried to avoid being declared fit. I tried my best at looking like a wimpy geeky nerdy match-stick man who wouldn’t be able to lift a rock from the ground, let alone a gun. But none of this worked – they declared me G1K1, and it was time to face the music.

There was this one bloke who came up to me saying “hey you, does your mother know you’re here?” I was familiar with this phrase, because I’ve always been short and I got this since Primary school, right through high school and now again some jerk tries this with me during my first day in the Force. I was just about to tell him off when I saw he had something on his shoulders. I spoke very nicely, saying “yes lieutenant, no lieutenant”, until he left me alone. This was when my buddy behind me decided to inform me that this dude was actually a captain, and not a lieutenant – a higher rank. I realised that I should have paid more attention to this whole rank-thing in school, because I obviously had no idea what was going on.

By now, I was seriously regretting my decision to join up, and was thinking of ways to flee the country without a passport. I still had 2 years minus half of 1 day left of my National Service, and it wasn’t looking like it was working out for me.

The exit door was getting closer and I could hear the staff yelling at people as they left the building. He would just ask “G1K1?”, and when you confirmed this, he would swear and point in a general dust cloud’s direction and would then tell you to lift up your hind legs and get moving.

After making us run around for a while, the staff pointed us to another big shed, where we were to collect our kit. This is where the army handed out all the heavy stuff.

They issued us with boots that were too big, an army beret and bush hat that was too big, brown overalls that were oversized, and underpants that were way too small. We also received a “varkpan” – loosely translated this is a “pig pan”. It was a piece of metal which you had to use as a plate to eat from. With this you got a dinner set called a “pikstel”, which was a spoon, knife and fork that all slid into one.

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Added to this was the famous “spoegbakkie”, which was a round metal cup without a handle. Drinking hot tea from this thing in the middle of winter was pure torture – it had no handle and you had to grip it at the top with the tips of your fingers and try not to burn your fingers or spill your tea. Loosely translated the word spoegbakkie means “spit bucket”. The spoegbakkie fitted into the round holes on the varkpan.

I’ve tried to get hold of a photo of one, but it seems that not one single soldier ever thought the spoegbakkie was important enough to take photos of them. Which is quite understandable.

After we were issued with all of our heavy gear, most of it stuck into a metal trommel, we were bundled onto another bus. We drove and drove and drove while it rained outside, and at one stage I thought we may be going all the way up north to the operational area.

We finally stopped at the famous place called Osona. We had now reached our ultimate destiny in life by becoming part of this well-respected establishment.

It was raining cats and dogs when we got off the bus. The camp was a nightmare – people were screaming at you from all directions – no one knew who they had to listen to, as one person would scream at you to move in one direction, while the other would point you in the opposite direction. You normally followed the directions of the person who swore the most.

I always knew that people were supposed to scream at you in the army, but until then I didn’t realise that they all screamed at you at the same time…

I ended up in what was called Platoon one, Alpha Company. This sounded quite cool, but meant nothing. No one was special because they were in platoon 1 – it was just a random number like all the others. We were however lucky enough to be booked into a bungalow. Some of the other blokes got placed into what we called “tent town”, where a bunch of tents were placed far away from toilets and anything else.

It was raining so hard, you could barely hear the corporal swearing at you.

These poor fellas were still moving into their tents after nightfall; soaked from the rain - mud and water was everywhere. All of a sudden a bloke turned up wearing nothing but his underpants and a web-belt around his waist, sigarette in his mouth.

This bloke looked pretty high up in the ranks and he started swearing at these poor troopers like there was no tomorrow. He made them crawl around in the mud, doing push ups and running around in the dark, until he finally let the poor sobs go to bed.

Everyone remembered this bastard’s face – after all, if you ever saw him again you’d disappear as soon as possible.

When they had to line up for roll-call the next morning, they saw this same bloke standing in line with them. It turns out he was also a new recruit and he was just toying around with them. Needless to say, he was severely dealt with later…

And so ended my first day in the army. We were told that we could expect an inspection the next morning – whatever that meant, it did not sound like we were going to enjoy this...