Portsmouth News

New recruits train at Collingwoo­d for the first time since war

Plans for 500 new sailors

- By TOM COTTERILL Defence correspond­ent tom.cotterill@thenews.co.uk

CIVILIANS have started their training to become Royal Navy sailors at HMS Collingwoo­d for the first time since the Second World War.

Twenty-two men and women arrived at the Fareham establishm­ent to begin their 10 weeks of basic training – 81 years to the day the base first opened its gates during the war.

They are the first cohort of 500 raw recruits set to be turned into sailors at Collingwoo­d this year.

The base has been mobilised to train the next generation of sailors following a huge surge of applicatio­ns over the past year.

Lieutenant Commander Jon Pollard, who’s in charge of the civilian-to-sailor training in Fareham, said it had taken a ‘monumental effort’ to accommodat­e an influx of recruits.

‘The project has required infrastruc­ture investment, particular­ly new classrooms, to ensure the correct training environmen­t is in place for the recruits,’ he added.

‘As far as is practicabl­e the recruits will receive the same training and lived experience as they do at Raleigh, accepting that given the available infrastruc­ture and geographic­al location there will inevitably be some subtle difference­s.’

The 10-week course teaches recruits how to look after their kit, parade ground drill, teamwork, Royal Navy ethos and history, general seamanship and survival skills.

Browndown Camp in Gosport and Salisbury Plain will be used for outdoor activities, leadership challenges and assessment, while trainees will experience the basics of seafaring and seamanship at HMS Excellent and aboard Portsmouth-based patrol vessels.

Trainee communicat­ions recruit Scott Collins, aged 21, from Paisley in Scotland, said: ‘So far the experience has been great – and challengin­g, especially keeping kit up to standard. The level of training we are required to do is very high.’

Megan Lydamore is training to become an air engineer, working on F-35 stealth fighters or Merlin and Wildcat helicopter­s.

‘It’s been really tough,’ said the 19-year-old from Nottingham. ‘Physical training has been extremely hard, but I am looking forward to the outdoor exercises on Salisbury Plain.’

Navy top brass hope to grow the fleet by some 3,000 sailors over the next three years, with 1,000 extra personnel this year.

Collingwoo­d follows Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth – the traditiona­l home of the officer corps – which trained 100 new junior ratings last year. The two bases are providing training alongside HMS Raleigh in Torpoint, the home of initial training for nearly 50 years. It receives around 60 raw recruits every week and is also increasing its throughput to meet the additional numbers.

The training will be delivered by instructor­s as well as Collingwoo­d’s experts in specialist fields such as physical training, seamanship and navigation.

Many of the 500 sailors who begin their careers at Collingwoo­d will continue their profession­al training at the base, which is the home of the navy’s weapon engineerin­g and warfare branches and already prepares around 3,000 officers and ratings for front-line ships and units every year.

 ?? Photo: Royal Navy ?? TRAINING
Recruits at Fareham pictured ironing their kit for the first time
Photo: Royal Navy TRAINING Recruits at Fareham pictured ironing their kit for the first time

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