We went to Korea, I mean the unit went by ship. I, personally,
went with the three NCO’s separately by air because I was sent to
the school of infantry to become a little instructor, a cell if
you want, to shift the army in Korea from the .303 rifle,
the basic weapon, to the new FNC1 which we were converting
to which was (inaudible). So myself and three sergeants
were sent to Borden to take that training and the unit left by
ship to Korea. The four of us caught up with them by train to
Vancouver and then air via Anchorage, Alaska and Tokyo,
and then by train to Hiro, which was the reinforcement camp.
So we went that route, I went that route as opposed to with the
unit. Overwhelming almost, it’s rather interesting because I have
a daughter that lives in Japan now and when she first went there
she told me, she used exactly the same words, she said,
“Dad, it’s overwhelming.” But then, we arrived in Japan when
the old customs and the rituals and the dress of people and that
sort of thing, were very much more than it is today. Where cities
like Tokyo were still very Japanese. I suspect they are to this
day too but they’ve also westernized to a large extent. They wear
the same clothes that we do. We were just absolutely fascinated
just watching the work, watching the girls walk by on these shoes
with little wooden soles and like “cluck, cluck, cluck,” wearing
these kimonos that obviously prevented them from walking with
long steps like we would and all these little . . . . They looked
like porcelain dolls actually, they were very attractive!
And, of course, to a bunch of young men arriving in the Orient,
you know, we we’re very impressed with all this. But then we got
quite impressed by other things too like you go on a train in
Tokyo to go to Hiro and if it says you’re gonna be at a certain
place at 12:17, this is exactly when it arrives and it stops.
They were very highly organized people. And, so we were there
for only, oh, a couple of weeks and then we were flown in an
Australian aircraft to Korea where we joined our unit in the
field. So I arrived in Kimpo Airport at Seoul and met a British
artillery sergeant who was piloting a small spotting aircraft and
he came to me and saluted me which I found very impressive.
He had a big mustache and at the most, I would have had a fuzz
on my face in those days, and he says, “Are you going to your
unit sir?” I says, “Yes, indeed I am!” He says, “I’d be happy to
give you a lift.” So he gave me a lift in something like an L19
or a Lysander, I forget what they were now, but in the back
seat with my kitbag. And we were flown in very close to the
ground into a divisional airstrip and then I got on a field phone
which you crank, and got on the field phone, call my unit
and they sent a truck to get me. So that was about 36 hours after
leaving Vancouver. We’d been travelling all that time.