Author: Vic Socotra

No Tombstones at Sea: the Search

From Sam Cox, Director of the Naval History and Heritage Command: “Upon arrival on board PETREL, I reacquainted with Mr. Robert Kraft, the head of PETREL’s “A.T.U.” Unit (“All Things Underwater,”) Mr. Paul Mayer, senior researcher and jack of many trades, and Ms. Janet Greenlee, their superb public outreach leader. Onboard with me were also […]

Arrias: America: a Place or an Idea?

America faces several existential threats. Two of them – Russia and China – are somewhat ordinary, in that we’ve faced them for years. They remain threats none-the-less, but we know how to deal with them. Then, there’s debt, huge, multi-tiered layers of debt – federal spending, Medicare and Medicaid, Social Security, multiple federal and state […]

Guadalcanal

(This is the fourth in a series of accounts of the voyage of RV PETREL and RDML Sam Cox in search of the war graves of some valiant Americans. It was tense, violent and unforgiving to take back this small portion of the South Pacific from the invaders. But it marked the turn of the […]

The Search for Wasp and Hornet

(This is the third part of the account of the search for two lost aircraft carriers from the war against Imperial Japan. These are the words of RDML Sam Cox, USN-Ret., director of the Navy’s History and Heritage Command. I consider his mission no less than sacred. – Vic) I had been invited aboard the […]

The Hunt for Wasp and Hornet- Part Two

This is the second part of the account of the hunt for the Navy ships that still rest on the bottom of Iron Bottom Sound off the island of Guadalcanal. If you wish to experience the unbelievable carnage inflicted by the US and Imperial Japanese Navies on one another, I suggest a read of “Neptune’s […]

Old Navy: Three of a Kind

So, I am minding my own business down at the farm. The transition to Spring is in progress. The gophers have come out, Cat is patrolling her property and I almost stepped in some deer spoor emptying what I hope is the last batch of ashes from the winter hearth. I am at peace with […]

Swamp Postcard: Spring Has Sprung

There are thirty or forty candidates declared for the Presidential follies next year. It is a great demonstration of our democracy- or better said, our Constitutional Republic, not to put too fine a point on why we do not understand each other as citizens anymore. There are some extraordinary proposals, among them being the New […]

Ides of March, Actually

It is the actual Ides of March today, actually, and according to lore, there is not a lot good that will come of it. The ancients were right. I wrote about the Ides of March and the assassination of Great Caesar the other day. It was intended to be a (cough)likemetaphor about the turmoil in […]

Life & Island Times: This Cat’s Old Bones

Another bad, two-week long cold just ended. Hopefully, this concluded what had become an unending, multi-month spate of bad colds and a case of pneumonia. Feeling blue, I wrote a short piece after a chat with my pal Vic about this devilish winter’s ills that went something like: “Hey, Vic.” “Yeah, Marlow, what’s happening, man?” […]

Postcard From the Swamp: Ides of March

This has traditionally been known as a week in which bad things happen. The old Romans marked their time a little differently than we do in these late days. The “Ides” referred to the middle of a month- sort of baker’s dozen way to account for a year. The idea that March 15 is unlucky […]