SASABERANGER
SWCA Member, Absent Comrade
Navy Chow
I started as an E3 on the USS Randolph (CVS-15). A lot of the gear and equipment was straight out of WWII and Korea. Fresh food usually didn't last long enough to get us from Norfolk, VA to the MED. Milk usually went first.
Fast forward from 1966 to 1984 and to the USS Independence (CV63. I walked aboard as a senior E7 and was in for a real shock. Things had changed and The Chief's Mess was the envy of all on board. I had never seen anything like that in my previous 18 years.
I can't ever remember eating that well any where I had ever been.
And the storage and replenishing logistics were greatly improved. I can remember ever running out of any fresh food during my two years with the air group and deployments aboard.
And from what I heard back then and can only imagine today, the Nukes had it better than the oil burners.
Don't miss it a bit, and have no desire to see if things have changed since my day.
Thom Braxton
CPO-USN Ret. 1964-1985
SWCA #1474
I started as an E3 on the USS Randolph (CVS-15). A lot of the gear and equipment was straight out of WWII and Korea. Fresh food usually didn't last long enough to get us from Norfolk, VA to the MED. Milk usually went first.
Fast forward from 1966 to 1984 and to the USS Independence (CV63. I walked aboard as a senior E7 and was in for a real shock. Things had changed and The Chief's Mess was the envy of all on board. I had never seen anything like that in my previous 18 years.
I can't ever remember eating that well any where I had ever been.
And the storage and replenishing logistics were greatly improved. I can remember ever running out of any fresh food during my two years with the air group and deployments aboard.
And from what I heard back then and can only imagine today, the Nukes had it better than the oil burners.
Don't miss it a bit, and have no desire to see if things have changed since my day.
Thom Braxton
CPO-USN Ret. 1964-1985
SWCA #1474