Thursday, January 16, 2025

ONCE UPON A TIME IN A SAILOR'S LIFE

Reference: My FB Post dated: 4 October 2020

Travel to me is my livelihood....
Never mind how long precisely with having little or no money at all in my purse, I would be able to see the watery part of the world....
The profession of sailors has been known since time unknown..
My ancestor was once a great seafarer....
The secret behind being successful in the sea is nothing but to keep things as simple as possible....
No matter what, a calm sea never made a skillful sailor.. the art of the sailor is to leave nothing to chance...A skilled sailor did not acquire his skills by sailing only in the seas which are calm...If the sea is always clear and calm then the sailor will not know how to handle a storm when it hits. With every new challenge the sailor encounters, more knowledge and skills are gained…....
We must remember that in order to learn and achieve goals, we must face obstacles.
It is not that it is the ship that ensures a successful voyage. It is always the attribute of the skillful sailor who sails the ship.
As a sailor you will not be defined by how many seas you had sailed and how many ports you had been to.. but you would be defined by how many storms you has overcome.... there are things which we learn when there is a storm....
We cannot control the wind, but we can control the sail....
Remember...the sea has no place for cowards..
Honore de Balzac says, "A woman knows the face of the man she loves as a SAILOR knows the open Sea."
"To reach a port, we must sail-sail, not tie at anchor...Sail, not drift...."
(Franklin D. Roosevelt)




"The strongest stoms make the best sailors"

"A smooth sea never made a skilled sailor"
(Franklin D.Roosevelt)

"The wind and waves are always on the side of the ablest navigator"
(Edmond Gibbon)

Hj Zulheimy Maamor
Lembah Keramat, K.L
16/1/2025: 11.03 p.m

SHIP IS MY HOME, SEA IS MY PLAYGROUND AND WAR IS MY GAME

I joined the Navy when I was 19 years old, apart from wanted to serve my country, I truly wanted to make a difference. I joined the Navy with dreams of seeing exotic places around the world...

Sailor's life is completely an adventurous one, it just like any other job.....Sailor is the one who knows the feelings and emotions of the sea....A rough day at sea is still better than any day in the office..

When I first drafted to the ship in 1981, My petty officer used to say to me that "As a Sailor, Ship is your home, Sea is your playground and war is your game." I always keep that in my mind until I retired in 1996.....

After 16 years serving onboard 9 RMN ships, I had learned that Sea is my country, Ship is my Home, waves are my enemies, war in not my game as I never get involved in the war and duty is My life....
AHOY ! SAILOR
We are sailors, we're rugged, able men of the sea
Braving the oceans to the highest degree
GOOD NIGHT... and sweet dreams.....

THE SHIP I HAD SERVED FROM 1981 - 1992


KD GANAS
1ST SQUADRON FAST ATTACK (MISSILE)
BASE: WOODLANDS, SINGAPORE
3.2.1981 - 27.7.1981


KD RAJA JAROM
32ND SEALIFT SQUADRON
BASE: WOODLANDS, SINGAPORE
18.7.1981 - 28.6.1982


RIVERINE BOAT (LCP, RCP & LCM)
BASE: KD SRI REJANG, SIBU, SARAWAK
28.3.1983 - 24.11.1984


KD PENDEKAR
2ND SQUADRON FAST ATTACT CRAFT (MISSILE)
BASE: MALAYSIAN SHIPYARD ENGINEERING, PASIR GUDANG,JOHOR
25.11.1984 - 5 JANUARY 1985


KD MUTIARA
36TH HYDROGRAPHIC SQUADRON
BASE: LUMUT, PERAK
26.8.1985 - 1 MAY 1986


KD GANYANG
1ST SQUADRON FAST ATTACK CRAFT (MISSILE)
BASE: LUMUT, PERAK
8.9.1986 - 29.3.1987


KD PANAH
14TH SQUADRON PATROL CRAFT
BASE: TG. GELANG, KUANTAN, PAHANG
30.3.1987 - 11.10.1987


KD SRI NEGRI SEMBILAN
12TH SQUADRON PATROL CRAFT
BASE: LUMUT, PERAK
12.10.1987 - 28.3.1988


KD LEKIR
22ND CORVETTE SQUADRON
BASE: LUMUT, PERAK
7.8.1989 - 4.12.1991

RETIRED FROM THE NAVY
15 JANUARY 1996

Hj Zulheimy Maamor
Lembah Keramat, K.L
16/1/2025: 10.23 p.m

NAVY : CROSSING THE EQUATOR


The Equator is significant because it divides the Earth into the Northern and Southern hemisphere. It is important for navigation. This line sits zero degrees latitute, making it the reference point when travelers, map-makers, or anyone elso needs to determine the latitudinal location of an object on Earth. 
Seafarers life is chock full of myth and tradition, what happen at sea even affects our language. There are many naval traditions dated back hundreds and even thousand of years...Crossing the Equator is one of the naval tradition dates back at least 400 years in western Seafaring... It is a significant events for seafarers, symbolising a rite of passage.

Why would sailors avoid the Equator?
In both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, the sailors noticed that there was an area near the Equator where there was little or no wind. Without the wind to move their sail-powered boats, they would sometimes be stuck for days or weeks. They started calling these areas the doldrums,  a low pressure area from 5 degrees North to 5 degrees South of the Equator. Winds are famously calm here, with prevailing breeze disappearing altogether at times, making it extremely difficult to navigate through. It's a place for trade winds to meet other trade winds.

Sailor who had crossed the Equator will be awarded a certificate and they are accepted and be called Shellback.. it is a way for sailors to be tested for their seaworthiness...


While the term given to those sailor who have not crossed the equator before was Pollywogs.
With the pollywog to shellback transition complete, a certificate was often awarded to the new shellback as a rite of passage.
When the ceremonies were first conducted, they were physically challenging and could even be painful or embarrassing to the Sailors. This is a usually light-hearted event that allows the ship's crew to take sometime out from their hectic schedules and have fun with the rest of the crewmates.
Today, the event is voluntary and is conducted more for entertainment purposes and morale boosting than anything else.






I'm not sure whether this tradition is still practiced in the Royal Malaysian Navy... as there are some who do not agree with the practice of this tradition that may conflict with religion...
Wallahualam

Hj Zulheimy Maamor
Lembah Keramat, K.L
16/1/2025: 9.56 p.m

JOIN THE NAVY TO SEE THE WORLD


A Popular phase used by the Navy recruiters, and also often reference in TV shows and movies. Being at sea for a month, far away from family and friends. You will definitely see the world, but remember, 72% of the world is covered by waters.

But is it true if you join the navy you have the opportunity to see the world.....
For some its true... you have the opportunity to visit places you might never had the chance to do without joining the Navy.... while visiting foreign ports, you get to experience different cultures, cuisines and local attractions.
Its also depend on where you are assigned, is you are assigned on a ship at sea, you will visit a number of countries in a short period of time.....

And also some spend their entire career in the Navy and never went to sea on a single navy ship. I have many friends in the Navy who were based on the shore the entire time... and even some was on the ships that never sailed that far... maybe within Asia and not the world so to speak....some do "see the world" but only the sea of Singapore, Australia, Indonesia etc....
For me, when I joined the Navy in the early 80s....the recruiting slogan was "It's not just a job...it's an adventure"....that is what I really LOVE most... an ADVENTURE..... Not that seeing the ocean is a bad thing... it is one of my favorite things actually... through 16 years career in the navy, stationed onboard 9 ships, I did and saw many things that most people never dream of.

Only one thing you need to remember, that 72% of the world is covered by water. You'll see a LOT more of that than anything else!
"AHOY SAILOR...."





Hj Zulheimy Maamor
Lembah Keramat, K.L
16/1/2025: 5.22 p.m

ROYAL MALAYSIAN NAVY - NAVAL COMMUNICATOR



A Navy members who establish and manage communications systems for the Navy. They ensure that the Navy has reliable communcations for mission success. The Systems unclude HF, UHF, VHF transceiver, HF data modems etc.. Radiotelephony, radiotelegraphy, flag semaphore, flag hoist, and signal lamp or blinkers are used for sending signals.
Like human communications on land, the Naval communicators was initially oral, often through relays in small boats.
Effective communication is crucial to success in any field. The Maritime English is the lingua franca at sea so to speak, and is vitally important for a multitude of reasons, such as safety of the ship crews, the efficiency of daily tasks and the integrity of the ship.

A Naval Communicators assigned at Navy ships while sailing, will be standing watches in the Communication Room (COMCEN) sending and receiving incoming & outgoing messages, and also employed on the bridge of the ship with communications by radio, signal flags, semaphore or flashing lights (morse code).

A Naval communicator are relied upon for all matters of ceremony.

From the time of Flag Semaphores used as the primary means of communication for ship, Naval communication has gone through a long and winding evolution through the years.
The use of Signal Flag (Semaphore), dates back to ancient times. The Semaphore uses a series of flags to spell out a particular message, with every flag representing a specific letter.




Same as the use of Morse Code, allowed ship-to-shore communication via radio during the early 19th century. The Morse code is the method where text characters are encoded as standardized sequences of two signal durations, dahs and dits.
The International Morse code encodes 26 basic letters in Latin from A to Z, the Arabic numerals, a small set of procedural signals and punctuation or prosigns, and a single accented Latin letter, É. But the fact that there is a need to individually transmit each letter soon made the technology obsolete as it only added to the expenses for vessel communication.



While assigned to the Naval Base or when ship alongside harbour, a Communicator will be busy with sending and receiving messages which will involve typing and computer skills.... as a Naval Communicator you must be proficient in typing and using computers.




A teleprinter (teletypewriter, teletype or TTY) is an electromechanical device that can be used to send and receive typed messages through various communications channels, in both point-to-point and point-to-multipoint configurations.
A Telexz is a telecommunications system that allows text-based messages to be sent and received by teleprinter over telephone lines
The word "telex" is a contraction of "teleprinting" and "exchange". Telex includes a switched routing network, originally based on pulse-telephone dialing, which in the United States was provided by Western Union.

Reference:
1. Wikipedia - Teleprinter
2. Wikipedia - Telex





Radio wireless communication is the transfer of information (telecommunication) between two or more points without the use of an electrical conductor, optical fiber or other continuous guided medium for the transfer, it use radio waves.





The successful carrying out of modern naval warfare is, in the main, entirely dependent upon the art of radio communication.

For me, what is the best of being a Naval Communicator, It's fun because you always learn something, its fun to work with modern equipment and trouble shoot... eventhough thoday communication at sea relies more on satellites than flags signalling, the fundamental role of the naval communicator remain crucial to the ship's operational effectiveness.

Hj Zulheimy Maamor
Lembah Keramat, K.L
16/1/2025: 4.53 p.m

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

KUALA LUMPUR: FOREST RESEARCH INSTITUTE MALAYSIA

Forest Research Institute of Malaysia (FRIM), located at Kepong, Kuala Lumpur about 16 km from Kuala Lumpur city centre. Founded in 1929, the former Forest Research Institute became a full-fledged statutory body, governed by the Malaysian Forestry Research and Development Board (MFRDB) under the Ministry of Primary Industries, in 1985.

FRIM is a-must-visit for nature lovers  and outdoor enthusiasts.  It is the holder of 6 National Records and had been declaree a National Heritage in recognition of its conservation efforts. FRIM is the world's oldest and largest re-created tropical rain forest. 

The 486-hectare reserve providea a relaxing back-to-nature experience such as a waterfall, river, shady trees, ponds and landscaped gardens. Here visitors can enjoy spectacular vies and discover a wide range of flora and fauna from a 30m-high canopy walkway and various jungles trails. Those who wish to camp overnight in the reserve must obtain permissiona from FRIM.

Today, FRIM is home to 18 species of mammals, 182 species of birds, 57 species of snakes, 30 species of lizards, 7 species of tortoises and turtles, and 34 species of frogs.

https://selangor.travel/listing/forest-research-institute-malaysia-frim/









Hj Zulheimy Maamor
Lembah Keramat, K.L
15/1/2025: 2.34 p.m