Chapter 5 .. “Square Bashing”
At the end of our brief stay at the reception unit we were informed that we would be doing our basic training at No. 4 School of Recruit Training RAF Wilmslow.
“Where the bloody hell is that ?” I ventured to ask a friendly looking sergeant.
“It’s Oop North lad” he answered. “Near Manchester”.
What he didn’t tell me was that it would be a very uncomfortable journey by a very slow troop train, packed with new recruits and their kit, and would take a whole day, with one short break at Crewe, with just enough time for a mug of tea and a corned beef sandwich if you were lucky.
We arrived at Wilmslow station after dark and were informed that transport would be provided to take us and our kit to the training camp. It wasn’t ! .. and so we were ordered to pick up the nearest kitbag from the heap which had been thrown off the train and .. march ! I was very glad that someone else was carrying my very heavy bag and that I had one which seemed only about two thirds full.
I don’t remember much about arriving at the camp …

… except that we were fed and bedded down for the night.
The following morning I learned that I was assigned to Hut 420 – G2 Flight – No.4 Squadron and that my ‘DI’ (drill instructor) would be Corporal Orange, who was known to all as “Jaffa”: and a very menacing figure he cut when he appeared for the first time in front of the members G2 Flight as they stood in line outside Hut number 420.
Now I must say that I had ‘struck lucky’ when I found myself in the care of Jaffa Orange, because although he was a tough DI, he was also fair and compassionate when the situation called for it, like at our first morning roll call.
Jaffa looked at a clipboard and began to call our names .. “Andrews .. Atkins .. Barlow” .. He stopped .. “OK .. Where are you?” .. he asked. “Here corporal” came the reply from a lad further along the line. Jaffa continued .. “Brown etc. etc.”.
What was that all about ? .. I wondered. Later the young man who answered “Here corporal” confided in his hut mates that his surname was “B’stard”.
Our DI was also married and lived in married quarters or off the camp which meant that the ‘corporal’s bunk’ in Hut 420 was unoccupied, allowing us recruits to relax when ‘off duty’.
My fellow recruits in our hut were, as you would expect, a very mixed bunch from every corner of the UK, which meant that as a Londoner I had to quickly learn to understand what was being said by young ‘Geordies’ .. ‘Scousers’ .. and .. ‘Jocks’. One lad kept us all in fits of laughter with his wonderful “Ooh arr” West Country accent and his tales of life down on the farm.
Basic training lasted for eight weeks and mainly consisted of military drilling on the parade ground, otherwise known as “square bashing”, plus weapons training and lots of physical exercise such as running around the local countryside wearing baggy shorts and big boots.
Now it should be remembered that although ‘other ranks’ in the RAF are designated as ‘airmen’, at that time, our first eight weeks of service life were mainly spent training as soldiers and much of that training was carried out by NCO’s of the RAF Regiment who are soldiers, and who were always referred to as ‘Rock Apes’.
I’m afraid that I never made much of a ‘soldier’ during my ‘square-bashing’ days, but I just about managed to scrape though by ‘keeping a low profile’, as I had been warned never to volunteer for anything and try to ensure that no NCO instructor got to know your name, for if he did, it would be the first one shouted out when something unpleasant was about to happen.
Only once did I fall foul of a ‘Rock Ape’ sergeant, when on the rifle range on a very cold and wet morning, when I was ordered, by this moron of a weapons instructor, to throw myself onto my rubber groundsheet and commence firing at a distant target with a heavy bolt action rifle which had probably last ‘seen action’ in World War II.
Wallop ! .. I hit the ground, rifle at the ready ! .. but my ‘John Wayne’ moment was completely ruined when the magazine dropped out of my gun and my steel helmet fell off and rolled down the muddy slope and into the open area of ground between the shooters and their targets. I crawled forward to retrieve it, quite forgetting that two dozen novice riflemen where blazing away above my head.
I won’t go on, as I’m sure that you can imagine the ‘bolloking’ I got from that sergeant, before he ordered some corporal to .. “Take this man’s name !”.. which the corporal did, except that the name he scribbled in his notebook wasn’t mine.
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(to be continued)