Earlier this week, Old NFO had a tale of woe about the trials and tribulations involved in his move from the (ptui!) DC area
to some as yet undisclosed location in God’s Country. (Those of you unlucky
enough to not live here might refer to it as Texas.) In that tale of woe, he mentioned that he had
somehow misplaced his coffee pot.
That harmless statement, as it always seems to, set off a flood of commentary. One commenter went so far as to describe coffee as the “Lifeblood of the Navy”. Included in the comments were the Top Secret
procedures for making that Lifeblood. (That
should be good for an extra hit or two from the NSA.)
While most readers know that “back in the day”, I was in the
Air Force as a Fighter Pilot, some may not have read these riveting posts
on my first tour as a Joint Staff Officer.
One of the benefits of that job, other than, you know, being based at
Camp Smith Hawaii, was spending time aboard the flagships of the USN’s 3rd
Fleet and 7th Fleet, USS Coronado and USS Blue Ridge
respectively.
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USS Coronado AGF-11 (decommissioned in 2006 and sunk in the Marianas during an exercise in 2012)
Public Domain |
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USS Blue Ridge LCC-19
Public Domain |
A small result of that
time was getting to sample some of that “Lifeblood of the Navy”.
I also got to spend a good bit of time
with 3 MEF on Okinawa. (I also spent time with I Corps at Ft Lewis WA, but that’s
a different story). All these
deployments involved exercises in which contingency planning was the
objective. Coming up with an operations
plan on short notice with a tight deadline necessitated some very long days. Long days meant Coffee.
I think I started drinking coffee in pilot training, but I
was never more than a cup or two at a time person at that point. Strapped in to an ejection seat and pulling G’s
is not a fun thing with a full bladder, and the restroom facilities are sadly
lacking in fighters. (Never used a
piddle pack! Not even on the Trans-Pacific drags.)
So….Where was I? Oh,
yeah. Coffee and “Lifeblood of the Navy”.
So…There I was*
Camp Smedley Butler, Okinawa Japan. Deployed to 3 MEF for a Joint Task Force
training exercise. The Joint Staff (in
the Pentagon, believe me nothing good comes out of that building) has decided
to test USCINCPAC’s ability to stand up a Joint Task Force, develop an Operations Plan and have forces ready to deployon very short notice. We get the Warning Order and, within 3 hours, my team is airborne on a C-141 bound for Okinawa. That's at least a 10 hour flight
(more if it’s winter) and we couldn't afford to waste 10 hours of planning time. This was back in
the early 90s before airborne WiFi was commonplace. We had a specially modified hatch panel that
had a satellite antenna on it and so used that time to begin building the Plan,
coordinating both with Camp Smith and Camp Butler. Very exciting stuff at the time. (Yeah, I know, it takes very little to get me
excited nowadays.)
In any case (which, again, is Texan for “Anyhoo”), we arrive
on Okinawa and continue to build the Operations Plan, sending drafts back through
Camp Smith to the Pentagon. We’ve been
at it for about 36 hours and it’s me, another Lt Col (USMC) and a USMC Warrant
Officer.
My counterpart Lt Col referred
to the Warrant Officer as “Gunner” with a high measure of respect in the tone
of his voice. I elected to follow his
lead.
We’re putting out the latest
version of the Plan and it’s oh-dark-thirty.
The Gunner comes in and says he’s going to turn in and asks if we need
anything before he does. I ask him for a
cup of coffee figuring he’d tell somebody to make a pot. He walks off and shortly thereafter brings
back a couple of cups.
He’d made them himself.
I didn’t sleep for at least 12 more hours. (At which point,
the Joint Staff called EndEx as they couldn’t keep up with us.)
Navy Coffee was good, but I thought it was kinda weak
thereafter.
We’ve had a Keurig in the house for a while, and my brew of
choice was always Jet Fuel for a couple of reasons, but the primary
reason was it is as close to the Gunner’s coffee as packaged coffee could
get. Lately however, even that seemed to
be getting weak and disappointing.
On our recent vacation, in the B & B we rented in
Sydney, the kitchen came with a DeLonghi Espresso machine. Now, I like Espresso, but I want my coffee in
something other than shot glasses. This
machine had a setting that allowed you to make the Espresso as large as you
wanted. Suffice it to say, I was
adequately caffeinated while in Sydney.
Coming back to the real world was tough, and the Keurig didn’t
help. However there was a posting on
Instapundit about DeLonghi Machines being offered on Amazon at a special price.
Santa brought me one for Christmas! Put whole coffee beans and water in the
machine, push one button and Espresso comes out. Life is good!
Hope Everyone had a blessed Christmas and has a Happy New Year!