My 1969 Plymouth Road Runner

Read My Thoughts On Surviving Non Hodgkin's Lymphoma
Chuang Tzu
A Tribute to the SuperHILAC
In memory of one of the
greatest atom smashers of all time
A Tribute to the USS Oriskany CVA34
The USS Oriskany CVA 34 aka:The Mighty "O" of Korea and Vietnam. -was an aircraft carrier that was stationed at the Alameda Naval Air Station in Alameda, California. I was fortunate to have served aboard this heroic navy vessel. I reported aboard, in late 1969 when I was still a green seaman who was trying to become an ET. The first person that I met in the ET Shop (electronics shop) was ET Chief Tanaka. He seemed like a nice little chief ...at least that was the case until he found out that I was still a seaman because I had not done especially well in Branch 2 of Electronics School. I learned that very first day, that Chief Tanaka had once been the head of the ET "A" school, and he expected the best from his crew. That was the beginning of some interesting times for me and Chief "T".
I spent most of my first months on the "O" Boat in port doing some compartment and head cleaning, and standing many watches walking around a dumpster for 4 hours in the middle of the night. This introduction to carrier life was only a temporary thing, and eventually we did go out to sea for a very long time. I spent most of 1970 and 1971 floating in the waters off Vietnam. I never really agreed with the political reasons I was there in the service of my country instead of being back in California going to college. In the end my questioning the war really didn't matter, but my being there wasn't a total loss. I made a bunch of new and interesting friends while I was in the Navy. I still stay in touch with some of them today :-)
What does matter is that time that I spent floating around Vietnam and in the Philippines definitely changed me forever. It took a few years for the whole experience with the Vietnam war to soak in, but those days that I spent in southeast Asia made me come to understand just how lucky I was -and still am-to live in the country that I live in. We in the United States have so much in our everyday life that we take for granted. Others in this world are not so fortunate. I have seen-and smelled-the third world and I am grateful to have come home from it alive and well and able to live a good life. Without my tour of duty on the Oriskany I would have never seen that part of the world or learned what I did about the lives of others less fortunate. Never take what you have or granted because by your birthright you have been blessed. When I was young, it was hard to be in the Navy. It was hard because my heart wasn't in it and I really didn't want to be there. Today when I look back at that time I seem to only remember the good and forget the bad. But then, isn't that the way most of us look at life in our latter years? Having spent some time thinking about that I think that probably is a good thing.
Sadly today the Mighty 'O' is no more. In May of 2006 she was sunk 24 miles southeast of Pensacola, Florida. With that reefing the Oriskany became the largest manmade reef on the ocean floor. It is an honor that the Mighty 'O' was not salvaged and turned into razor blades. Instead, she sits proudly on the ocean floor where the fish and plankton are now her new crew. Her sinking was a fitting tribute and respectful ending for this heroic naval vessel that proudly served and protected this nation for so many years. Hail Atlantis!!
Some Oriskany Links
Former Oriskany Crew Tell Their Tale
Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 The Reefing
Pictures Of
the Oriskany Reefing-taken by the US Navy Dive Team
See video of the Mighty 'O' in her new home...way down below the Ocean
How To Visit The Oriskany...if ya feel the mind to matey
THE USS ORISKANY -
MEMORIES OF VIETNAM
Thanks to Larry Matthews for permission to link to his site
Some Other Links you might be interested in...or maybe not ?!?
Some things to Think about...or maybe
not
Dedicated to the 58,000 men and women that never had the chance to make it to
old age. The greatest tragedy of my lifetime and the 20th century.
Want to know the distances between two places?
Links Dedicated to Science
A Study of the Universe Through Circular Rotation.
Big Science in America's Heartland
Bomb Designers For the New Millennium
Bomb Builders For the New Millennium
Some Other web
sites I have made.... For better......For worse.

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