I never imagined that my personal prognostication was so
much off the mark. When the command list was promulgated, I began by looking at
the top of the list and as I went further down my heart began missing beats.
There at the bottom of the list, in very smudged print, as if as an
after-thought, where the rust-buckets are generally listed, my name figured
prominently against Lord Yamraj’s transportation vehicle - the Water Buffalo or
INS Mahish. What can I say: ‘Kismet, Hardly!’
Mahish was a Polish ship, of WWII vintage design, built in
1985 in Gdansk during the Soviet era by Soviet Naval architects with brains in
their backsides. India had acquired four ships in exchange for bananas. The ship
was about 60 meters in length and had a large ‘Tank space’ to carry BMP tanks
and a Company of Troops. Of course with our Indian ingenuity of ‘much more with
much less’, we used to carry the much bigger T-72 tanks, Arty field guns,
Troops and assorted paraphernalia. The ship was so awkwardly built that in the
calmest weather it would roll a good 20 degrees and in order to keep my balance
I had to self-induce a counter-roll of 20 degrees to achieve gyro
stabilisation. There were times when I reached home after hardly a day’s work
and unconscientiously continued with the 20 degree anti-roll, much to the
consternation of my wife and kids. “Mum, why is Pa waltzing around in the
house?”
While most warships on our planet sail with both engines in
the ahead mode, Mahish had to sail with one engine ahead and the other engine
in astern mode! This was because, the
engines were designed without reverse gears, so when you needed to go astern,
you had to stop the engines and propellers and fire the engines in the astern
mode! Since there were limited air bottles on board to kick start the engine,
(and also there was no guarantee the engines would fire with the first salvo of
air) it became a practice to handle the vessel with one foot forward and one
foot backwards.
What can you expect from dishing out bananas, anyway!
The good thing about Mahish was that she was born to be a
beach bum! You could beach Mahish time and again and she would never fail to
leave bottom every time you wanted to withdraw (from the beach, ofcourse!).
Ships are designed to float and sail on water and the thought of deliberately
grounding a ship is the nightmare of every mariner. While, putting her on the
beach can be done by any landlubber, taking her out of the beach is the key to
the whole operation. To do this, the beach is surveyed by physically measuring
depths with hand-lead-line and carefully charting the results, calculating the
tide for secondary ports and reducing it to chart datum, establishing the
gradient of the beach, then adjusting the trim and list of the ship by water
ballasting the tanks to match the gradient, before you can even think about
beaching the ship. Don’t forget, the tide is constantly changing. So, if you’ve
calculated to beach / un-beach at a particular time, you can’t change the time
without going through the entire procedure. Remember ‘Operation Overlord’ of
WWII, Landing at Normandy, D-Day and H-Hour on 06 June 1944? There was a method in the madness for so many
days of preparation.
On the issue of beaching, Mahish
stole a march over the other Landing Ships of the squadron. I can proudly say
that I was so confident of hitting the beach at any time of the night or day
that the Fortress Commander would dispatch me to give live demonstrations to
all the dignitaries visiting Port Blair. When the time came to embarking the
108 Mountain Brigade with their Tanks and field Arty guns during the Kargil
episode, Mahish under my command was the only LST at short notice that set sail
for a landing on the Makaran coast. Unfortunately, the cabal of party elders in
the Government decided to keep the Navy and AirForce out of the skirmish. In frivolous pursuit of a very vacuous mind, I used to think that the
disinclination of other Landing ships to prove their beach-worthiness used to
border more on ennui than anything else. After Anand Kulkarni (54/B) left, I
took over as
L-19, Squadron
Commander of the 19th Landing Ship Squadron. Sadly, during my
deliberations with the young Commanding Officers, they would be indulgently
dismissive of my efforts to get them to beach their babies.
Mahish was designed to suffer from multiple personality
disorders. The ship was built to withstand a nuclear holocaust and so had very
small portholes, the size of saucers. We had to navigate the ship from the open
bridge. The wireless sets were valve operated with one operator fanning it
desperately, and the other transmitting in short bursts to prevent the valves
from heating up. The radar worked on cutting edge technology of 1937, when the
first maritime radar was fitted on HMS Sheffield and paved the way for all
future radars in the world. One usually had to look out of the porthole to
confirm a target acquired on the radar.
I can say with
confidence that we operated Mahish with a remarkable combination of sloth and
caution. The bower anchor on board was non-operational because the gypsy
sprockets had worn out, and likewise for the Scotchman’s plate and links and
kenter shackles of the anchor chain cable.
With the unbeatable ingenuity of the Naval Repair yard, they had kept
replacing bits and pieces of chain cable, windlass drum, brake liners and
bushes from decommissioned vessels till it became difficult to estimate which
exactly were the original parts of the original windlass. This left us with
only the stern sheet anchor (designed for beaching operations) to anchor our
vessel. So, during Formation beaching, while every other ship of the Fleet
reverentially pointed to the tide at anchor, we showed our backside in utter
disregard. It was bottom’s up, without the Gin pennant!
The ship could do very little apart from beaching, but that
didn’t stop us from patrolling the Western entrance of the Malacca Straits and
challenging every Merchant vessel that passed that way. Mahish would boom on
the wireless “Ahoy, what ship, where bound?” and the big Car-Carriers, Tankers,
Bulk Carriers, Passenger vessels and Container ships would salute us by
lowering their Red ensign to half-mast.
Mahish had a top speed of 6 knots which strangely coincided
with its bottom speed of 6 knots. We had a contingency plan when the Flag was
embarked for beaching exercise. With binoculars around my neck and braided
sea-cap, I would take position behind the compass pinnacle and holler “Ring on
Main Engines”, the Chief Quarter Master would repeat “Ring on Main Engines”,
the Side Boy would pick it up and pass it down the voice pipe “Ring on Main
engines” and the Engineer Officer in the Engine room would smartly put the
engine telegraph to ‘Standby Engines’, with all the toots and whistles
accompanying the order. Then we would work our way from, ‘Dead Slow Ahead’ to,
‘Slow Ahead’ to ‘Half Ahead’, to ‘Full Ahead’ and ‘Battle Speed’ in same
fashion, without moving even half a knot faster. The Admiral would look at the
ship’s wake and smile without saying a word.
Once in a while he would tease me by saying “Up two turns,
Captain.” Now to a layman this may sound like “Up yours, Captain!”, but in
naval parlance it simply means ‘can you rev up your engines a bit to give us
more speed? I would oblige with all the seriousness of an English butler “Sir,
request permission to hoist the foxle awning on the main mast and use it as a
sail.” The Admiral would graciously wave me off and say “Belay the last order,
Captain.”
Apart from high speed manoeuvers of this nature, we executed
our signal telegraph messages very seriously. Flag Echo on the halyard meant
‘Senior Officers are having lunch and will thereafter retire for a small
snooze’, which was designed to totally confuse the enemy because in the
International Code of Signals, Flag Echo stands for ‘I am altering course to
stbd.’ Incredible!
Since the mascot for our ship was the water buffalo, one
fine day I instructed my Executive Officer to have one brought and tied at the
gangway for one of our parties. “Chief, Isn’t it a good idea to get a mascot
for the evening’s party?” I said. The ExO replied “I don’t think so sir.” “Just
do it, dammit!”, I barked (Like the Admirals I had served with). And it was
done. That evening as the party progressed, the ExO came to me “Sir, the mascot
has shat all over the entrance to the ship and the guests will have to wade
through a pile of dung to get to their cars.” From that day there was no talk
of the mascot in my presence, though I was keenly aware of all the wardroom
jokes that eventually must have found their way to the Reader’s Digest.
At this point I must narrate a very interesting episode that
got the establishment knickers in a twist. My coursemate, Anand Kulkarni
(54/B), was commanding INS Kumbhir (another Mahish class of ship). Kumbhir was
beset with bigger problems than Mahish. After working very hard with the Naval
Repair Yard at Port Blair, Anand got the ship to move its bottom and leave the
moorings at Haddo wharf. One Sunday morning, Kumbhir set sail with all gusto at
a top speed of 3 knots for her machinery trials. It was a fine Sunday morning
and the 108 Brigade Commander was settling down to a-hole-in-one-shot on the
golf course when he noticed thick black smoke bellowing out from the funnel of
INS Kumbhir in the far distance. Not knowing what to make of it, he called the
Fortress Commander and reported that one of his ships was on fire!
The Fortress Commander was taken aback but called up the
Operations room and told them to get in touch with Kumbhir on the wireless to
check it out. Probably the radio set on Kumbhir wasn’t working too well (valve
set and what not of WWII vintage), but when the Ops room didn’t get a reply
they panicked and launched a helicopter to investigate the matter. Meanwhile the Commanding Officer and his
brave men on board were sorting out a
few in house issues in the engine room (that’s what they are supposed to do),
quite oblivious to the outside world. The Officer on watch in the Bridge saw
the chopper, but decided it was a routine flight and didn’t think much about
it. When Kumbhir finally made way into harbour about 4 hours later, she was
welcomed by a very concerned Three Star Admiral, his staff officers, personal
retinue and dog, not to mention of an entire Flotilla of Officers and sailors,
who had been pressed into service with a red alert and recall messages to sail
out immediately. Anand Kulkarni walked down the gangway of his ship to a
rousing reception of rabbling ratio!
In school I used to take part in the 4 x 100 meters relay
race. The best runner in a relay is invariably given the last leg and has the
advantage of having the whole stadium rise in applause. The second best runner
gets the first leg, while the third best runner gets the third last leg,
leaving the second leg for the weakest of the four runners. Harold Sir, our
sports teacher in school had for some inexplicable reason put me in the second
leg, when I deserved to be put on the first leg. Our school was run by the
German Jesuits. When I reported the matter to Fr. Oesch, he smiled and said
“use this as an opportunity to win the race”.
When the race began and the baton was passed to me, all four
first leg runners were more or less neck-to-neck. Since I had a definite edge
over all the second leg runners, I took off and gave a huge lead to my team,
which continued and we eventually won the race and saved the day for the
school.
I remembered this great lesson when I took over command of Mahish.
Anil this is superb.Maneouvering with one engine going ahead and one astern was quite a job! added to that a limit of six orders and after that empty air bottles! I called L22 as "the croc" because that was her mascot. I will write about some incidents about the crock!
ReplyDeleteTI enjoyed reading it.By the way did you guys have the following written on your T shirts " We do it on the Beach - L 19"