By chance the tables were turned on me not long afterwards. A bat had flown
into the
FWHQ building and become trapped. Where did it roost in the daytime? -
hanging upside down from an electric conduit immediately above the centre of my
office door! Thus, I became the centre of amusement for a few days until the
creature was removed.

The
Boss had a Volkswagen Beetle allocated to him for his use. It was the only one on the Station with chromed hub caps instead of the standard dark olive-green.
It was his habit, each morning before Met briefing, to do a runway surface skid test
in this vehicle. The skids, slides, twists, and turns he did were a wonder to watch. If
the surface was dry, as was most usual during the summer season, the amount of
blue smoke generated from the tyres had to be seen to be believed. I was
unfortunate enough to be bidden to accompany him on such a test one morning. We
had no seat belts. The way I was thrown about inside that car was almost brutal.
Then, as if to cap the performance, he said he was going to check the crash gates in
the boundary fence. Driving a mite more slowly over the rutted forest tracks I still
had great difficulty staying in my seat. It was all right for him, he had a steering
wheel to grip. I had nothing. I really thought I'd met my end when, on driving
furiously down one track, he saw a spindly, dead, pine tree lying at waist height
across the track. Stop and get out? Oh, no. He drove hard at it and hit it so hard that
it bounced up off the rounded bonnet of his car and went way over the top of us to
land clear behind.

There were times when he would ask me to use his car to drive somewhere on the Station to deliver some document or other that needed prompt attention. I did
this fairly regularly. But once, I got it wrong.
Wg.Cdr. Way was in the
Boss's office
with him when I had to use the car. Not realising, I got into the wrong car and drove
off, did what I had to, and drove back. It was only when I was parking that I realised
that the
Boss's car was in its usual place. I had used
Wg.Cdr. Way's without
permission. He was waiting for me. Using a choice of words which I can no longer
remember, I wangled my way out of a dressing-down by somehow mentioning that
he had left his keys in it when all unattended vehicles should, under orders, be
immobilised. I took an enormous risk, but I got away with it.
Hammer asked me
what
David Way had said, and I replied that I had said more to him in explanation
than he had said to me.

While still on the subject of the
Boss's car: at the annual Summer Ball in the Mess, after the official guests had left, and as day broke before the party ended, a
near riot broke out during which
Hammer West's car was lifted bodily from the car
park, up the steps, and into the dining-room to be placed on a cluster of tables for all
to see. The feat was executed by many hands, comparatively quietly, and with the
delicacy born of drunken precision. Not a dent, not a mark was on it. There it sat on
its makeshift plinth until next morning. [
Click to see.]

That morning, a little later than usual, the
Boss walked to his office and, on entering, said just one thing to me "Pod, get my bloody car back where it belongs
ready for Monday morning." He then retreated, probably to nurse his thumping
head. This was a tall order. To attempt to get hungover pilots to remove it would
have been impossible in the circumstances. Fortunately
Flt.Lt. Wright, the Station
MTO, who didn't drink a lot, was in his office as usual, so I phoned him for
assistance, which he duly provided. He sent a group of drivers to the Mess to do the
job. Unfortunately the car was dropped on being taken down the Mess steps and
was dented. All credit to them, the
MT Section did a cover-up job over the weekend
and the car was returned, as required, for use on the Monday morning.
As to parades: for some weeks during 1955 the
Station Commander had
ordained that it would be good for Junior Officers (anyone below Flight Lieutenant
144