We’d been underway for a couple of days headed for NORPAC amphibious training. Mobile had her full compliment of Marines(250) on-board and was transporting them to southern Alaska for mountainous maneuvers.
I was this evening’s Duty Section Engineering Department Petty Officer, as well as Repair Division’s Duty H.T. I just made my rounds, seeing to it that the sweepers had done their jobs before I went up to the ship’s nightly movie. No sooner had I settled down in front of the movie screen with my soda, kipper snacks and crackers, Mobile's 1MC blares out, "Duty HT, lay to the bridge."
I had a bad feeling it was another distress call from troop berthing. Each night, since we’d been underway, the Marine on watch down in troop berthing would call for the Duty HT to come down and unclog their water-closets in their compartment's head. As always, it was just before the evening movie went down, and the head was always a stinking mess. I grabbed, Mendez, my duty gopher, and immediately, he started pleading and whining, trying to get out of our latest detail. "Follow me!" was all I said.
Up to the bridge we went, and sure enough it was the troop berthing head again. Troop berthing holds 250 Marines. It’s situated centerline-amidship, is as wide as the ship, and is at the bottom of the ship(7th deck), below the waterline. You enter troop berthing at the aft bulkhead of the compartment, go down a couple long ladders and your standing on the keel(bottom) of the ship. Continue to walk to the compartment's forward bulkhead, past the 250 racks that are stacked six high, you see two more long ladders, port and starboard, leading up to the shower and head. These two separate compartments are purposefully situated several feet above the ship’s waterline for drainage purposes. When you go up the long port ladder, you’ll be standing on the landing leading into the head. Open the door and your standing in the head.
The forward bulkhead of the head held four plugged urinals, plum full of Marine excrement. To the right of the plugged urinals, were four water closets, three of which happened to be full to the brim with the same brown smelly stuff. The last water closet was still functional and occupied. A line of five or six noisy Marines were rooting for it’s occupant to hurry and evacuate his bowels. What a stinking mess! I noticed that the wash basins had crap in them! These Marines had been awfully busy today. And were these boys ever happy to see Mendez and me. Hooping and hollering. Cussing and carrying on as they were. I ignored their taunts as best I could, and told them, "No problem Marines, we’ll have you Marines fixed up in a jiffy!" I looked over at Mendez and saw that he was about to faint. "We’ll be back as soon as we can. First we have to get some gear!"
I could have passed this little ditty on up to Chief Little. It would've been the proper thing to do. He even hated Marines worse than he hated me. But he was a total jerk, so I chose not to get him involved. Besides, I had a more fun and interesting plan. Up to the Carpenter Shop I went.
Meanwhile, I had Mendez open the small access panel next to the door to the head and run a 1-1/2" fire hose up through it. I brought back a ton of stuff from the shop. A pair of 5,000volt rubber electrician gloves, a Mark V gas mask, a partial bucket of okem, several wooden DC plugs, one 1/8" 7018 welding rod, a 24" pipe wrench, and a 4"clean-out plug with a custom made 1-½" female swivel adapter I’d up made earlier.
When I returned, I saw where Mendez had lost his lunch on the landing by the head’s door. After I made sure I had enough hose to work with, I told him to stand by at the bottom of the ladder, guard the fire hose and wait.
The Marines thought I was pretty funny looking, wearing the gas mask and gloves. I assured them I’d have them fixed up in a jiffy and proceeded to empty two of the porcelain bowls. I ‘bout puked in my mask, but I was a man on a mission. What the Marines did was toss in oranges, apples, pop cans and rolls of toilet paper, just to see if they would flush. When that didn’t work, the Marines then filled the bowls up the rest of the way to the rim with various shades and textures of excrement. As soon as I emptied their crud on the deck, I packed okem into the turd chute and tapped in a DC plug nice and tight. I did this to two of the four bowls. Keep in mind that the puckey filled urinals and sinks utilized the same four inch drain manifold as the water closets; these I left alone and untouched. I replaced the 4 inch drain manifold's clean-out plug with the fire hose adapter plug, and attached the 1-1/2"fire hose to it.
One Marine was still occupying the last bowl. I didn’t bother him or the other five of his Marine brethren still waiting in line. I excused myself for a moment, stripped my mask off and called Mendez up the ladder. I told Mendez to man the fire plug, and his eyes got big as the smile on his face, "When you hear me beat on the bulkhead with this wrench, charge that hose with everything it's got and then, get lost! I’ll be right behind you so don’t get in my way!" As Mendez left, I closed the hasp on the head door and twisted a welding rod in place as a padlock. "BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!", went the pipe wrench. Down the ladder rails I slid shouting, "MAKE A HOLE!!" At about the same time I ran over a Marine, 150PSI of salt water forced its way up into the head via a 1-1/2" firehouse. I heard this muffled, "BUH-BOOM!" and some garbled screaming and yelling on my way out of troop berthing.
The movie was nearly over when I sat down. I guess I must've smelled a little rank, ‘cuz these guys gave me funny looks as they got up and left the movie. I kept waiting for the ship’s 1 MC "Flooding Alarm" to go off, but it didn’t. So I left the movie and cautiously made my way to the Carpenter Shop to see if there was any fallout yet. The Sounding/Security watch showed up an said he’d heard what Mendez and I did in troop berthing. I admitted nothing of the sort. "Mendez must be on drugs. Don't listen to him!" says I. "Go back to your watch before I place you on report!"
The aftermath was kind of amusing. The two bowls I had plugged up, stayed on the bulkhead. The only casualties during this exercise were the last two exploding porcelain bowls, and the sitting Marine. When his pot exploded, he tried to jump over the water closet door, and in the process of escape, scraped his legs all up jumping over the shitter's door. The sinks and urinals got cleaned out, but the opposing bulkheads needed cleaning now. The Marines standing in the head got a free mud bath and refreshing shower courtesy of the Mobile's Repair Department . Even the deck and all of the Marine gear and laundry in troop berthing, from the second rack down, got a free salt water wash job. A ton of water a minute that can spew out of a 1 ½" fire hose pumped up to 150p.s.i. Who knows who, how or when that fireplug got shut off.
Not one gripe reached my ears. Not a single warning or threat. Not even a peep from HTC Little. The two broken bowls weren’t replaced till after we returned to San Diego. But best of all, there were no more complaints or repair calls from troop berthing during the rest of that cruise. Another satisfied group of happy campers, compliments of the USS Mobile!
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