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Hitting Storms

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Hitting Storms

Mr. Gauthier tells what it was like on the boat during storms. It wasn't easy to sleep with the boat tossing but that was when there was the least danger.

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Gilles Gauthier

Mr. Gauthier grew up in Cap-de-la-Madeleine, near the port. His father had a restaurant where he often heard sailors talk of what was going on during the war and on the ships. Interested, he went to the HMCS Montcalm offices in Québec City to enlist, to no avail. He was 17 years old at the time and was called up when he turned 18. After his basic training, he took a telegraphy course in Saint-Hyacinthe. After the course, he was sent to Halifax to sail for Bermuda to work as a telegrapher. Back in Halifax, he set sail on the HMCS Springhill to escort convoys. After the war he was in the Régiment de Trois-Rivières, the 12th Armoured, until 1953.

Transcription

Hitting storms

In the beginning, they sent us to the banks of Newfoundland to escort convoys leaving from Halifax. After that, they sent us to Sydney, in Nova Scotia, and from there, we escorted ships in the Gulf, just past the banks of Newfoundland. Then after that, they sent us to Greenland and afterwards, Iceland. But Iceland was the coldest. That's where the biggest storms hit. But the banks of Newfoundland got some good ones, too. There was one storm that hit, that the ship took in the side a bit. It took almost a day before the captain could get back on course to put the nose into the storm. I saw a guy about six foot two being thrashed, flung from one side of the ship to the other, just like a flash. We guys, our mess was in the nose of the ship. And then when the wave hit on the side, he went with it. He was lucky, all the hammocks were in the corner. He wound up in the hammocks. Otherwise, he could have hurt himself really bad. Well . . . the waves were at least thirty to forty feet high. It was quite the storm. And then when the nose goes up, it shakes, then it goes back down, and the wave goes clear over the ship; that's quite a wave. The nose shakes, it's just like . . . it's like . . . or when it goes back down, the propeller spins in the air and you feel the vibration everywhere. It's rather . . . it kept you from sleeping much. Because even in the hammock, you would . . . every time that the ship would dive into the wave, you would dive in your hammock too. So, you had to go back up, too. So, it kept us from sleeping, but we slept well because we knew that, during storms, there weren’t submarines on our tail very often. But when it was calm, we didn't sleep as well.

Ship covered with ice

When we hit the north of Greenland, and the coast of Newfoundland too, in ‘44, before going overseas, we often had spells of extreme cold. It was very cold, and our ships weren't like today's, they weren't insulated. The walls were iron and we often saw frost on the sides of the ship in the morning, and that’s where we’d have to get dressed. We almost always went to bed dressed, too, because it was too cold. There was one day that we woke up and the ship seemed to be pretty slick; it was really leaning over, then the [inaudible] gave us sticks to break up the ice everywhere we saw it; this happened right after we hit a storm from the side. Where there was ice, the posts of the ship were almost three times their usual thickness. The wires were at least twice or three times as thick, too. And the weight was only on one side. So it's dangerous for the ship; it's difficult to steer. I reckon that the captain must have had a hard time of it. And it wasn't the only one. It was the same thing for all of us, for all the ships. And that was a usual thing to do, we didn't think much about it; it was a normal chore.

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