And I then actually ended up, with my own platoon, in the line
from about mid-August 15, 16, 17 August, somewhere in there,
until we came out in about the 2nd or 3rd of November. So it was
about half of August, all of October and a few days in November
and during that particular time I got my feet wet. You know it
was a wet August that I had mentioned. The monsoon season was on,
July and August seem to be when the rains come and everything
gets soaked and bunkers collapse and trenches fill up. You never
seem to be able to get dried out. That period was uncomfortable.
September the weather got better. October it seemed to be really
very nice. So from mid-August through to November you went from
rain to almost summer and fall. Most of that time was spent
in the position to the right, the immediate right of Hill 355 or
Little Gibraltar, which was occupied by the Royal Canadian
Regiment and was the scene of a major battle near the end of
October. We were very much part of the target by the Chinese for
suppression of fire that may support the RCR in repelling the
Chinese attack which was being prepared very early in September
and October. There was registration of gun targets
taking place throughout September and October for an attack that
they knew, the Chinese knew, was going to be made at the end of
October. We didn’t know that but there was obviously something
that was being prepared for. <br /><br />There was a lot of
patrol action going on in the valley, mostly in front of the
RCR but spilling over again into us. We spent a lot of time in
the valley, the Samachon Valley or Nabouri was a little stream
which fed the larger river. That’s what separated us from the
Chinese. The distance between the lines at that point were about
1500 metres I guess in front of us.
In front of the RCR the lines came a bit closer together and
while I’m not terribly familiar with that particular part of the
far end of their front, I am under the impression that the
lines were quite close together there. But we had to get out of
our position into the valley and more or less go in front of part
of the RCR position. <br /><br />So we got into a
fairly wide, but heavily trafficked area in our valley in
attempting to establish outposts, in attempting to set up
ambushed in reconnoitring certain positions for various
reasons. My experience in the valley tended to be
too frequent as far as I was concerned because at one point in
time, as I mentioned, I was the only subaltern or platoon
commander in a company which should have had three others. And
part of the patrol policy during part of that time was that
certain types of patrols had to be led by officers. And when you
parcel the duties out, you run out of officers if there ain’t
many of them. But most of us then have to pick up another
turn. Throughout September and October my recollection of that
period is that I seemed to spend an awful lot of time out in the
valley in one way or another and not much time in my bunker.