Saturday, April 12, 2008

Some Things You Just Gotta Have


Today we shopped a little, ate a little, swam a little and rested a little. Patrick did manage to get his Starbucks and cheesecake fix. We were not successful in getting him a laptop. I guess we will continue to look when we get home. We have to mail it to him anyway.

The stories of Boot Camp are interesting and sometimes funny. It is neat to hear more about what he experienced. It is amazing to actually see where the hand of God was and has been upon him through Boot Camp. Even neater that Patrick can see it himself. Sure beats trying to read it in his letters.

Tomorrow is our last day and I can already sense it will be hard to say goodbye. Pray for all of us if you think about it tomorrow.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Graduation Day!

We made it to this wonderful day! We are so proud of Patrick. He has really grown up in 8 wks. We have enjoyed the day with him and had to take him back to the base early. He has duty this evening.

As you can probably tell from this terrible photo he has lost a lot of weight. He also has no skin on his heals! Ouch and yuck! But he has such a good attitude about everything. Tomorrow we (ok, Dad and Patrick) will shop for a laptop for A school and eat at the Cheesecake Factory!

He has preliminary orders to move over the his new 'home' on Tuesday and start A school on April 24th. That is a huge answer to prayer. We didn't want him to have to be on 'hold' for a long time waiting for his classes to start.

Monday, April 7, 2008

It's Official

Patrick is now a SAILOR !
He passed Battle Stations and called a little while ago. He is exhausted but elated.
We leave early Wednesday morning for Chicago. Graduation is Friday morning. We will post pictures on here for everyone as soon as we get back to the hotel.

Thanks again for your support and prayers

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Battle Stations Today!

Patrick is in Battle Stations now. He started at 6:30 am and won't finish until tomorrow morning. Please keep him in your prayers. It is his last "Big Thing"He is excited and ready to get it over with. He will get to call tomorrow night and tell us he is officially a United States Navy Sailor!

We can't wait to see our Sailor! We will post pics to this blog after graduation while we are there with him. I am sure he will have something to add. :)

Thanks again for your prayers and support.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Battle Stations

Here is a great explanation and description of Battle Stations. Patrick will go through this on Monday April 7th.

USS Trayer is the Navy’s latest training tool and part of Battle Stations 21, a culmination of basic training and a recruit's last evolution in boot camp.Before recruits graduate from boot camp, they spend an entire night on board Trayer loading stores, getting underway, handling mooring lines, manning general quarter stations, stopping floods and combating shipboard fires. It is as close to being underway as a recruit can get before they receive orders to their first ship. It is also considered the final evaluation of a recruit’s reactions in tight situations and a chance for the recruit to see how far they have come in their training.“It’s 12 hours of anything that can happen aboard a ship at sea from missile attacks that can cause fires to flooding caused by exploding undersea mines,” said McKinley. Battle Stations 21 also uses lessons learned from actual events, attacks and mishaps at sea. The 2000 terrorist attack on USS Cole (DDG 67) in Yemen, mine damage to USS Tripoli (LPH 10) in Desert Storm in 1990, and the missile attack to USS Stark (FFG 31) in the Persian Gulf in 1987 have all been incorporated into the training curriculum. The training also incorporates past and historic at-sea accidents, like the fire on board USS Forrestal (CV 59) during the Vietnam War in 1967.The destroyer simulator was designed by award-winning Hollywood set designers and has state-of-the-art special effects technology. There are scenes and flats on the pier that can be changed to make it look like the ship has pulled into a new port.Trayer also sits in a pool of more than 90,000 gallons of water and there is a lighting system to make it look day or night on the pier. All this scenery and Hollywood-style setting is the first thing the more than 80 recruits from each division see before boarding the destroyer for their “underway” time.“You actually feel like you’re coming down a pier, walking across the brow and boarding a ship. Then you feel like the ship is under attack and you have to fight the ship, stop the fires and flooding, to save the ship,” McKinley said.Trayer is outfitted inside and out with salvaged gauges, pipes and electrical gear from decommissioned ships. Inside, compartments are outfitted with berthing spaces, control rooms and the bridge. There are also special controlled areas where magazine spaces flood and compartments are engulfed in flames.“We’ll now be able to give these new Sailors a chance to see what real battle damage, real flooding and a real on board fire can do and what it takes to fix it, stop it or put it out,” said Senior Chief Quartermaster (SW) Anthony A. Kachinsky