“RDP – in
every sailor’s life, there comes a period which sailors call RDP. This means,
Run Down Period. From the very first
time a sailor joins the Navy he joins a grotty training establishment somewhere
probably stuck out in the middle of Ipswich
like mine was. And you’re there for
something like about, a year, you see, and when you’re leaving, you’re so
bloody chuffed, you know, “I’ve had enough of this bloody hole, ooh if he got
up my nose one more time I’d have him”, you know. And that is when you’re
having your run down bit, you see. And
then you’re dying to get to the fleet, and you get to the fleet and you get on a
new ship, and it’s great! – for two hours! And then you start again, “e’ gives me the
bloody earache e’ does”, you know, like that, you see. And this is what you
call having a run down period, you see and in every commission and every sort
of barracks you go into, at the end of it all you always have this RDP bit. And the best part in a sailor’s life when his
most important RDP comes, is before he embarks on that lovely ship called
citizenship, you see, and he enters that great big cavern outside called
civilian street, you see, and this song, particularly, I wrote, I was standing
one morning on the gangway HMS Blake and I went out in the dockyard to have a
slash and I came back and saw this submariner walking toward me with his mac on
and his cap pulled down over his eyes and I said to him, “have you got the time
mate?” He said, “Piss off!” just like
that, he did, and I thought I’ve got to write a song about that, you see – and
so the ensuing song”:
Rammit Mate I’m RDP
(Shep Woolley 1940? - )
Chorus:
la la la la
lala la la la la lala la,
la la la la
lala la la la la lala la,
la la la la
lala la la la la lala la,
Rammit! I’m RDP!
I was walking through the dockyard,
one morning bright and fair,
When a sailor came towards me,
he had long and shaggy hair,
And he looked for all the world as though
He didn’t have a care
And he said, why are you looking at me?
I said, well it’s your uniform, you really look a scruff.
He said, see me in me civvies mate,
I’m really quite the stuff,
And when I put me BRUT on,
I smell just like a puff,
I’m a smoothie from RND.
I’ve been to Honolulu and
I’ve been to Tokyo ,
I’ve been to San
Francisco , most any place you’ll go.
I’ve been nine years in the Navy,
And there’s just three days to go
Rammit mate! I’m RDP!
There’ll be no more get your hair cut,
No standing out in road,
No more duty watches, no more RPO’s
No killicks, pigs or PTI’s now they get up my nose
And Rammit
mate! I’m RDP.
As I return me pusser’s dirk,
I’m sure I’ll feel the loss,
Two blue suits and steaming boots,
For now I’ll count the cost,
But I’ll stand outside the barracks and make rude signs at
the Joss
And Rammit
mate! I’m RDP.
I tracked polar bears in Iceland
Film stars down in Nice
Grissly bears in Canada
And snappers in the fleece
But now it’s nearly over
And there’s two days to release
Rammit mate! I’m RDP!
I’ve held me share of punishment
I’ve sweated in the sun
I’ve had 9’s and fines and DQ’s
But now it’s nearly done
And now some silly basket has just asked me to sign on
But Rammit
mate! I’m RDP.
But now I’ve stood here talking really long enough
I’ve got to go to barracks mate
You see, I’ve got to pack me stuff
Perhaps I might come in again
If civvy street gets rough
2010. Every kid who joined the Royal Australian Navy as an apprentice ‘MOBI’ remembers the winter evening ritual at HMAS Nirimba of risking encounters with senior apprentices, regulating staff and cranky cooks to reach the galley and get a kye issue in winter - hot cup of chocolate and a piece of cake. Like salmon in a mountain stream, success was not always a certainty.
Kye and
Cake Blues
Now the
cook stood guard at the galley door
Only
picked up his hook two weeks before
The
poster swivels on a government stool
And
ships him out to Mobi school
The
cook did Nam
and believes in fate
But
he’s never guarded kye and Madeira cake.
The
first term sprogs grow bold in a week
They
crawl on their knees through a muddy creek
The
cook he snuffles at the air that stunk
And
they blame dry cleaning that their battledress shrunk
So he
studies the drain like a greasy lake
And
ponders on kye and Madeira cake.
The
seniors listen for the scran hall squeal
And
they play another hand of mah-jong deal
The Reg
Chief’s asleep by nine o’clock
Lurking
in the shadows near the dhoby block
And
everybody thinks how do they make
Cocoa
kye and Madeira cake.
Well
the fog rolls in and the cook he sneers
At a
scran-bag birdie with his beret on his ears
He’s
been back classed and looks corrupt
With
his fingers all made from Bakelite cups
Still
the birdie hopes the cook’s his mate
Or he
gets no kye and Madeira cake.
Now a
chippy with a pannikin excites concern
It’s
twice as round as the cookhouse urn
The
sprogs get to thinking it ain’t their night
And
they jostle each other and start to fight
The
cook wonders why his life’s at stake
Doling
out kye and Madeira cake.
A fat
kid’s ribbed when he turns up cute
Dressed
in his slippers and a sleeping suit
His
mother he knows doesn’t quite understand
And she
wants him to play in the Mobi band
Night
dress code you never can break
If you
wanna get kye and Madeira cake.
The
mob’s in a mood and the mood is hate
The
cook stands up on an old milk crate
And he
thinks he heard something said
About
an O.D. chef and a mullet head
There’s
only so long he can make them wait
For
cocoa kye and Madeira cake.
Well
the cook has a rage his face is red
And he
orders all the Mobis off to bed
The
seniors fume they were messed about
And
they badger the sprogs well after lights out
The Reg
staff plan for the next intake
As they
clean up kye and Madeira cake.
J. O. White
Bakelite cup - standard issue cup made of tough plastic. Apprentices were given a cup as part of their kit.
Battle-dress - clothing issued for wearing at night in winter (night dress). It consisted of heavy woolen black trousers and a waist jacket that could be buttoned to the trousers. The jacket had two breast pockets and red Australia flashes on the shoulders.
Beret - naval apprentices wore a dark blue beret with a blue metal badge - single anchor in a rope circle topped with the Queen’s crown.
Birdie - anybody belonging to the fleet air arm branch - aircraft apprentice.
Chippie - a shipwright.
Dhoby - to wash; dhoby block, bathroom.
Hook - single anchor denoting the rank of Leading Seaman; picked up his hook - got promoted to Leading Seaman.
Kye - a hot drink made from thick blocks of dark chocolate .
Mobi - name given to naval apprentices training in HMAS Nirimba - used as an acronym for ‘Most Objectionable Bastards Imaginable’.
Mobi school - HMAS Nirimba located at Quakers Hill, Sydney was the RAN’s apprentice training establishment from 1956 to 1988.
Mullet head - derogatory term for anybody of the seaman branch.
Nam - Viet Nam - the Viet Nam war.
O.D. - derogatory term for anybody who is raw, inexperienced.
Poster - the person responsible for transferring personnel between ships and establishments.
Reg chief / staff - regulating chief and staff responsible for administration.
Scran - food served up in naval ships and establishments - used as an acronym for ‘Shit Cooked by the Royal Australian Navy’.
Scran-bag - untidy.
Sprog - any apprentice in a lower term than oneself.