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Description
Mr. Beyea speaks about his voyage to Cyprus onboard the HMCS Bonaventure and the change in temperatures upon arrival to this foreign country.
Transcription
We were the first contingency to leave. We went from CFB Gagetown to Windsor Park in Halifax and we waited the arrival of the HMCS Bonaventure which was Canada’s last aircraft carrier. We loaded our vehicles on there and we headed for Cyprus. Into the North Atlantic as a first time sailor, I found it very, very rough and the sailors that were on the ship turned around and told us when we get into the Azores, which was gonna be two or three days, that the sea would be much nicer. The sea wasn’t any nicer, it was worse but it was some nice to get into the Mediterranean and find that, you know, that seas do calm out and then we went on from Gibraltar on to Famagusta in Cyprus. I think the trip, if I’m not mistaken, I think the trip took us around ten days. We carried all our trucks and jeeps in our Ferret scout cars, and that’s what we had for vehicles for doing our patrols when we were in Cyprus was a Ferret scout car. Big culture shock, the temperature was the biggest thing. We left here, as I said in March and we were getting over there and it was like 90 degree weather and that’s Fahrenheit, of course, and we were in the Mediterranean swimming and the local people thought there was something wrong with us because they were freezing to death and we were cooking so it was quite a culture shock, believe me.