Look at this beautiful little animal, or is it a spider

The Peacock Spider
 
It is a species of jumping spider.
The red, blue and black colored males have flap-like extensions of the abdomen with white hairs that can be folded down. They are used for display during mating: the male raises his abdomen, then expands and raises the flaps so that the abdomen forms a white-fringed, circular field of color
YouTube : Peacock Spider

Gigantic piece of HMS Queen Elizabeth sails to join the rest of the ship

News

Gigantic piece of HMS Queen Elizabeth sails to join the rest of the ship
5 November 2012

The largest section of future carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth is now complete and has begun its journey to join the rest of the ship.

The gigantic aft section has been towed down the Clyde as it begins a 600-mile journey around the top of Scotland to Rosyth, where it will be attached to the already-joined sections.

Pictures: John Linton, BAE Systems

OBSCURING most of iconic Dumbarton Rock and its mediaeval castle, this is the largest section yet of Britain’s future carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth to be completed.

This gigantic segment– officially known as Lower Block 04 and weighing 11,300 tonnes – was carried on a barge down Glasgow’s great artery to begin a 600-mile journey around the top of Scotland.

Employees at BAE Systems’ Govan yard, where the section was pieced together, and members of the public watched as a large sea-going barge carrying the aft section of hull made its way along the Clyde, past new destroyer HMS Duncan in the final stages of completion at Scotstoun, and under the Erskine Bridge.

Travelling around the north coast of Scotland, the block – the final section of the hull to be finished – is scheduled to arrive at Rosyth next Sunday where it will be joined to the rest of HMS Queen Elizabeth.

The huge section passes HMS Duncan being fitted out at BAE’s Scotstoun yard

Lower Block 04 is 86 metres (282ft) long, 40 metres (131ft) wide and 23 metres (75ft) high and contains the carrier’s two main engine rooms, the sick bay and quarters for some of the 1,500 sailors and air group personnel who will serve in her later this decade.

 “There’s a real sense of pride here in the yard and across the Aircraft Carrier Alliance today,” said BAE’s Angus Holt, in charge of block delivery for the Queen Elizabeth class.

“This is the final hull section of HMS Queen Elizabeth and her arrival in Rosyth will mark an exciting and significant phase in the programme when we will really see the immense scale of the nation’s flagships.”  

The giant block was edged out of the firm’s shipbuilding hall at Govan a fortnight and prepared for its journey by being firmly secured to the sea-going barge. The carrier team closely monitored weather forecasts to time the block’s departure to ensure a smoother journey to the east coast.

The barge approaches the Erskine Bridge

On its arrival in the Forth, the block will be floated off the specialist barge and moved into position in dry dock, ready to join the other sections already in place.

Around 250 employees from the Clyde will follow the block to Rosyth where they will work in partnership with Babcock to complete the assembly phase.

Meanwhile, production on both Lower Blocks 03 and 04 of QE’s sister HMS Prince of Wales continues to progress at Govan, while the aft island for the first ship is under way at the company’s Scotstoun yard. Further sections of the hull are under construction in Portsmouth.

Half a dozen yards around the UK are involved in the carrier project, with some 10,000 people directly or indirectly involved in building sections, parts or providing equipment for Queen Elizabeth and her sister Prince of Wales. With the Olympics now done, it’s the biggest and most complex engineering project in the UK.

Military landings at Queens Wharf

Military landings at Queens Wharf

MICHAEL FIELD

Last updated 13:33 05/11/2012
   
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HMAS Tobruk

Reuters

WAR VETERAN: HMAS Tobruk will play a key role in the morning exercise.

Auckland’s Queens Wharf could look a little like the Normandy beaches tomorrow as the military practice landing soldiers ashore.

One of the Royal Australian Navy’s oldest service ships, HMAS Tobruk will play a key role in the morning exercise.

A New Zealand Army infantry company of up to 200 soldiers will practice getting on and off Tobruk using small boats.

The ship, which is already moored in Auckland, is taking part in Exercise Pae Tata to develop the Defence Force’s integrated amphibious capability to use army, air force and navy to secure landing sites.

The Defence Force says various sites will be used around Auckland with maritime, land, and air forces working together to conduct a beach landing.

Two Royal New Zealand Navy ships will take part, as well as several air force planes and the army.

Tobruk, which is classified as a “Landing Ship Heavy”, was commissioned in 1981. It was to have been retired in the early 1990s, but remains in service.

The ship honours the Siege of Tobruk in North Africa during which mainly Australians were involved in World War Two against forces led by Erwin Rommel.

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– © Fairfax NZ News

The battle of the North Atlantic: Royal Navy squares up against forces from ten countries for the biggest military exercise in Europe

The battle of the North Atlantic: Royal Navy squares up against forces from ten countries for the biggest military exercise in Europe

By ANDREW PRESTON

 


 

The battle, involving 26 fast jets, 24 ships, two submarines and 4,500 personnel, took place last month off the coast of Scotland. As Britain went to war with the U.S., Germany, France and seven other nations, Andrew Preston watched it unfold

A machine gunner on one of the bridge wings of HMS Kent prepares to open fire on enemy fast attack boats. In the distance are three Navy minehunters

A machine gunner on one of the bridge wings of HMS Kent prepares to open fire on enemy fast attack boats. In the distance are three Navy minehunters

An urgent message blares out on the bridge of HMS Kent: ‘Five contacts inbound, suspect RIBs not conforming to patterns of life. Surface threat warning now red.’ 

The boats have shown up on the ship’s radar three decks down in the ops room. They’re in an arrow formation, and they’re heading straight for us.

The frigate is at action stations, with the ship’s company prepared in their anti-flash hoods and gloves. 

A radio message goes out for the boats to identify themselves. They don’t respond. 

Then a gun is spotted on board one of them and warning shots are fired from a machine gun on the starboard bridge wing. 

One deck down, the ship’s 30mm cannons start to twitch, ready to lock on to any potential target.

When they keep coming, the order is given to ‘engage contacts when in range’. 

Moments later, the crackle of gunfire shatters the early-morning calm.

Commander Ben Ripley and fellow officers in the ops room give the orders to fire the ship's 4.5in gun

Commander Ben Ripley and fellow officers in the ops room give the orders to fire the ship’s 4.5in gun

The Royal Navy Type 23 frigate is escorting a convoy of four minehunters as it makes its way up a narrow inlet. 

Offering protection on the other flank is the imposing USS Gettysburg, from the U.S. Atlantic fleet. 

Criss-crossing a few hundred feet above is a Seahawk helicopter on patrol from the back of the American guided-missile cruiser.

As if this scene weren’t unnerving enough for the few bleary-eyed passengers on the first ferry puttering across the Kilbrannan Sound from the Isle of Arran to the Scottish mainland, two low-flying German Air Force Tornado  bombers then roar overhead.

The machine-gun shots were just the first fired in what quickly escalated into an all-out war last month off the west coast of Scotland.

It was fought on and under the sea, in the air and on land, and involved 24 ships, two submarines and 40 aircraft (including 26 fast jets) as well as land forces.

Flight Commander Ian Farr looks on as a U.S. Seahawk piloted by Doyle P Flannery III lands on the flight deck of HMS Kent

Flight Commander Ian Farr looks on as a U.S. Seahawk piloted by Doyle P Flannery III lands on the flight deck of HMS Kent

Over 4,500 military personnel from 11 countries, including Germany, France, the Netherlands, Denmark and the U.S., were caught up in the battle, yet it didn’t even make the news. 

The only responses were a few local complaints about noise and occasional GPS jamming (which it was claimed affected internet, mobile-phone and satellite-TV coverage).

This is Exercise Joint Warrior, the biggest military exercise in Europe and one of the most complicated in the world.

It’s run twice a year, at a cost of £7 million a go, with a fortnight of war games choreographed by  tactical-planning staff at Faslane naval base. 

They are the puppet masters, the scriptwriters and directors creating scenarios and, when necessary, provoking conflict. 

This time, as well as fast boat attacks (good practice for possible encounters at choke points such as the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf of Aden), there are enemy jets in the skies, suspect vessels to board, lurking submarines, suspicious low-flying civil aircraft and mines to be cleared. 

HMS Kent's 4.5in gun bombards Cape Wrath (this type of gun, with its angular, stealth design, is nicknamed Kryten after the Red Dwarf character)

HMS Kent’s 4.5in gun bombards Cape Wrath (this type of gun, with its angular, stealth design, is nicknamed Kryten after the Red Dwarf character)

To add to the confusion, there are also pirates, smugglers and terrorists – those having blanks fired at them as they attack the convoy off the coast of Arran are actually Marines and local boatmen who’ve come out for the thrill of pretending to attack a warship.

Captain Phil Titterton, who directs Joint Warrior, says it offers ‘everything from rescuing fishermen captured by pirates to out-and-out warfare’.

The idea is for the various national forces to practise working together – or, as the military put it, ‘test and improve their interoperability’. 

Soon these ships could face a very real threat – HMS Kent is preparing for a six-month operational deployment next year.

When thrown together, the closest of allies have an inevitable fascination with each other’s idiosyncrasies. 

On board the Gettysburg

On board the Gettysburg

The Americans ‘just love’ the accent of the well-spoken officer from HMS Kent who liaises with them over the radio during the fast boat attack.

‘At least the terrorists know they’ll be going to war with the Queen,’ jokes a U.S. officer.

After a helicopter from the USS Gettysburg lands on HMS Kent, the American pilot steps onto the flight deck booming ‘Doyle P Flannery the Third’ as he thrusts out his hand. 

High-explosive shells, weighing 48kg, come up from the deep magazine and are manually lifted and loaded onto a feed ring

High-explosive shells, weighing 48kg, come up from the deep magazine and are manually lifted and loaded onto a feed ring

‘Hi, I’m Ian,’ replies Kent’s unassuming Flight Commander, Lieutenant Ian Farr.

News soon spreads that the USS Gettysburg really does have a constant supply of cookies on the bridge, a machine for hazelnut-flavoured coffee and cereal bars and snacks constantly available – you don’t get that on the UK’s £2.44 per person per day for food. 

But otherwise the American food is deemed a huge let-down – pre-prepared and served on disposable paper plates, unlike the Saturday-night steak, Sunday roast and curries served on proper plates on British ships.

There are also wry smiles at the Americans’ apparent nervousness at navigating the narrow sea channels around the Scottish islands. 

At night they prefer to head out into the wide Atlantic swell, even though it’s rough.

‘They’re more used to being out in what we call the blue water,’ says Kent’s commanding officer Commander Ben Ripley, ‘but that explains why they’re here, as their focus is shifting towards the littoral (the area close to the shore). 

‘Doing fast-attack-craft swarm exercises, air defence and so on in this environment – where they haven’t got just clear blue ocean all the way round and there are mountains that can mask things – will be of massive value.’

To be fair, it also seems that if a U.S. captain has an accident with his ship there are no second chances – it’s goodbye to a career in the navy.

This is only an exercise and most of the fighting is done by computer simulation. 

Commander Ripley scans the horizon on the bridge of HMS Kent in an anti-flash protection suit

Commander Ripley scans the horizon on the bridge of HMS Kent in an anti-flash protection suit

But the gunnery practice is very real as HMS Kent pounds the peat bogs of Cape Wrath in the far north-west of Scotland with high-explosive and star-shell illumination rounds from her 4.5in gun.

‘Command approved. 4.5 engage.’ 

Inside the ops room there’s a dull thud as a shell is fired 12 miles towards the MoD bombing range. 

Standing up on a bridge wing, the shock of each shell thumps you in the chest, before you’re hit by the smoke and the foul smell of cordite.

The gun has just been upgraded, and it’s not long before it begins to stall, with a sensor inside becoming misaligned. It’s not the only challenge the crew face. 

Communications systems fail, while out on the bridge wings one of the machine guns jams. 

This is on top of the routine problems, such as a failed motor in the radar on the upper deck having to be removed in the middle of the night for repair while the ship is ploughing through 12ft high waves.

High-explosive shells ready to be fed into HMS Kent's 4.5in gun

High-explosive shells ready to be fed into HMS Kent’s 4.5in gun

‘It was like trying to undo a bolt with your head out the window going down the motorway,’ says the engineer who drew the short straw.

The ship recently underwent a £24 million refit, including upgrades to her weapons systems as well as the installation of state-of-the-art sonar equipment to maintain her anti-submarine role.

The money only goes so far – the only change in comfort for the crew was the addition of 240-volt sockets by each of their bunks.

As the exercise continues, Kent is diverted to support HMS Ambush, the second of the new Astute-class nuclear submarines costing over £1 billion each, as she makes her first ever dive at sea.

These are nervous moments. It’s two years since her sister vessel HMS Astute ran aground off Skye, an incident which saw the officer in charge relieved of his command. 

The gunnery practice is very real as HMS Kent pounds the peat bogs of Cape Wrath in the far north-west of Scotland with high-explosive and star-shell illumination rounds from her 4.5in gun

The gunnery practice is very real as HMS Kent pounds the peat bogs of Cape Wrath in the far north-west of Scotland with high-explosive and star-shell illumination rounds from her 4.5in gun

Also, as Kent sails away from the Isle of Arran, she passes over the wreck of a WWII submarine, HMS Vandal. 

In 1943 the submarine was lost with all hands just four days after being commissioned. 

Kent will patrol near Ambush in case anything goes wrong, and also to very politely ask fishing vessels, ferries and survey ships to steer clear for safety’s sake.

There’s a blast from Ambush’s rear ballast tanks like a spout from a giant whale as the stern of the submarine starts to go down. 

The bow then follows suit and, once level, she slowly drifts from view until finally the  masts disappear.

Today she’s helping, but in a couple of days HMS Kent will be a target as she hunts and is hunted by a Norwegian diesel submarine as if for real. It’s back to the game… 

HMS Kent from the ship's Merlin helicopter. The ship recently underwent a £24 million refit, including upgrades to her weapons systems

HMS Kent from the ship’s Merlin helicopter. The ship recently underwent a £24 million refit, including upgrades to her weapons systems

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-2226267/Royal-Navy-squares-forces-countries-biggest-military-exercise-Europe.html#ixzz2BEunTMfx 
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Sick man airlifted from cruise ship off Perth

Sick man airlifted from cruise ship off Perth

Posted 7 hours 10 minutes ago

A man is in a stable condition after being winched from the deck of a cruise liner and taken to a Perth hospital by a Navy helicopter.

The Royal Australian Navy frigate HMAS Toowoomba was conducting training in the early hours of Saturday morning near Fremantle when it received an urgent call from a nearby cruise ship to transport an ill passenger ashore.

The Toowoomba’s Seahawk helicopter was dispatched at first light but had difficulty accessing the passenger because the liner did not have a landing pad.

The patient was eventually winched off the ship deck and into the helicopter.

He was treated for abdominal pain by a doctor on board the aircraft while being taken to Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital.

Topics: navymaritimeperth-6000fremantle-6160

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