Where Dad Dropped In: An 82nd Airborne Troopers Story

Sorry about not keeping my wonderful
readers up to date. So much has happened since my last posting in
late August, it seems like a lifetime ago.

Jane and I covered 13 countries in all
and since the last posting we were in France, Luxembourg, Belgium,
Germany and The Netherlands. Our original intention was to leave from
Copenhagen, Denmark, by ship, on October first. Things progressed
quicker than planned and we found we had a few weeks to kill before
the ship sailed. Jane was anxious to return home and wanted to fly, I
preferred the ship. Finally, it came down to a coin toss and I
lost—we flew out of Amsterdam.

As many of my readers know, I’ve been
working on a book about our hike of the Camino de Santiago in Spain.
I’ve decided to put it on the back burner because something much more
urgent has come up.

My father, Ernest R. Blanchard, was in
the 82nd Airborne Paratrooper Division in World War II.
Unbeknownst to me, he has a story that needs to be told. He fought in
North Africa, and then parachuted into Sicily, Italy, Normandy,
France and then Nijmegen, Holland. Additionally, he was transported
by truck to fight in the Battle of the Bulge at La Gleize, Belgium.

As we traveled around Europe, I learned
so much about him and the battles he was involved in that I just had
to tell his story. He would have been 100 years old this year, but
passed away in 1983. He was the recipient of three Purple Heart
Medals, the Silver Star, Bronze Star and a host of other medals. He
never talked about it.

I started researching his story before
I left on our five-and-a-half-month journey, but never realized what
I was getting into. I knew that when he parachuted in Ste Mère
Eglise he had landed in a tree, but the story was much more complex
than that. He and another fellow, Pvt. Blankenship, both landed about
the same time, Blankenship was killed immediately by machine gun fire
coming from the church steeple. They couldn’t see my father that
well, and he managed to cut his parachute cords and drop 25 feet to
the ground and got away, all the time carrying 85 pounds of
equipment. Miraculously, he didn’t get hurt or break his legs. He did
cut off a good portion of his thumb when he cut the chute lines.

Of the fourteen men that jumped from
his plane, only four lived through the night. The most famous of them
was Pvt. John Steele, he ended up hanging from the church steeple.
The town hangs a parachute and simulated paratrooper from the steeple
each year in his honor. Another trooper, Sgt. John Ray, landed next
to the church and a German soldier came around the corner and shot
Ray in the stomach, and then turned to shoot both Steele, and another
trooper hanging on the other end of the church, Pvt. Ken Russell.
Before he could fire, Sgt. Ray managed to pull his pistol and shoot
the German soldier. Ray then died. Russell cut his parachute lines
and escaped and Steele was captured later.

I started researching this story in
greater detail and discovered so much more about that night…too
much to cover here. Let me just tell you that it is quite a story.
While in Ste Mère Eglise we were looking through books that might
turn up something about my father’s story. Jane found a book,
American Paratrooper Helmets, by Michel de Trez, that had a photo of
my father’s helmet on pgs. 106-107, plus photos of him that I had
never seen before. The helmet was in a museum in La Gleize, Belgium,
so once we finished our business in France, we headed for Belgium. We
met with Michel, he runs the museum, December
44
, and he invited us to have a look at the helmet and other
items he had related to my father. National Belgian Television sent
out a team to film the event and you can see a video of it on the web
page: WhereDadDroppedIn.com.
The book about my father is titled Where Dad Dropped In; An 82nd
Airborne Troopers Story. The photo on the page shows my father just
before they left for the drop in Normandy on D-Day.

There is so much more to tell, but this
is already long enough. Check the book’s web site often for more
information as I add to it. I won’t be able to post as often as I
would like here (or there) since I really need to be writing the
book. My plan is to have it ready for March, 2014. That will be the
70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion and would be an
appropriate time to have it ready. Stay tuned.

On to France.

I’m writing this on a train, flying
along from Newcastle, England, to Portsmouth, England. Jane and I
just completed walking across the island from Bowness-on-Solway, on
the west coast, to Newcastle, on the east coast via Hadrian’s Wall. It is some 77, or
78, or 84 or 90 miles, depending on which literature one refers to.
This has been a consistent problem with travel information, it never
is accurate.

The guidebooks are notorious for this.
We’ve purchased two on this current trip, both published by a
reputable publisher, and both have bordered on useless. The maps have
legends icons that are not defined anywhere in the book, maps that
fail to show distances and extraneous information and landmarks.

The text in a guidebook, above
all else, should do just that: guide. There is an entire paragraph in
our Hadrians Wall guide that describes, in great detail, a pub/inn
and then comments at the end of the description that the
establishment is no longer in business! Really? Then why describe it?

Yesterday, we finished walking Hadrians
Wall, a delightful experience exploring the Roman ruin that stretches
all along the English/Scottish border. The wall was built by the
Romans to defend England from Pict raiding parties from Scotland. The
Romans were never able to “tame,” the Pict tribes and the wall
was a measure to defend the Roman occupied territory. Recent evidence
indicates that the wall may have been as much a tax collection
barrier for commerce as it was a military defense.

The wall itself was quite an impressive
structure; it varied in width from a few feet to up to 15 feet and in
height from a few feet to as much as 15 feet. Every mile there was a
Milecastle, a military post for troops, as well as turrets spaced in
between. With signal towers and a connecting road, it made a
formidable structure, only exceeded by the Great Wall, in China.

When we finished the walk yesterday, we
had planned on an eight mile walk, it became a sixteen mile jaunt.
Why? The guidebook map showed that the route “might” be eight
miles, but had the distance missing on one page, and even the page
that did have distances were not very exact. There was no one map
that clearly showed any distance so it was difficult to fully realize
how far we would walk.

Not all guidebooks are this poor. When
I walked the Appalachian Trail, in 2007, I used the ALDHA guidebook,
and it was almost flawless. There was no superfluous information. As
much as I enjoy walking in Europe, I must say they need to improve
the guidebooks.

Spain, Portugal, and back to Spain.

It has been a very long time since my last entry here, and much has happened. To make a long story short, we set out from Barcelona, Spain on our bicycles and rode 800 km (500 miles) to Leon, Spain. Jane had a bad crash there and needed 20 stitches on her knee, and was advised not to ride the bike for a month. 
So, we took a train to Santiago de Compostela with the bicycles and stored them there, and then a bus to Lisbon, Portugal to walk that Camino back to Santiago.
Currently, we are a few days away from Santiago. The walk across Portugal is beautiful, and the people are extremely friendly and helpful, but the walk is tough. It is very lonely, there are not many other pilgrims walking the section from Lisbon to Porto, and a good portion of the walk is on busy roads with crazy drivers. However, from Porto on, it is a great walk and if one only has two or three weeks to do a long walk in Europe, it is to be recommended.
Jane is walking just fine, but riding a bike is still going to be a challenge. We have to assess what we’ll do when we reach Santiago. Since we have so many other countries we plan to visit, we may just take the bikes by train to catch a ferry boat and head to either Normandy, France, or the U.K. We’re not certain yet.
It was challenging to operate the radio while walking Portugal. We were just too tired and spent at night. Finally, yesterday, during our last day in Portugal, we stopped in a farmer’s field, put down the sleeping mats, threw up an antenna and got on the air. 
I talked with three stations: Roy, G4DMC, the U.K., Sig, DL1HSI, Germany and Yoan, LZ1YW in Bulgaria. All were great operators and I enjoyed my Morse code chats with them. My little radio, the ATS-3A and the QRPme.com Tunah Tuner are real performers.
Once we decide on our next phase of the journey, I will post something here. Hopefully, in the next few days I will have more time to operate the radio from Spain as well.
Thanks for following.

It has been a very tiring journey!

Mid-day, and we’re already exhausted. This was taken near, Leida, Spain. The weather has actually been below freezing, and we came prepared for late Spring temperatures. The mountains are covered in snow and the locals are complaining about the fact that it SHOULD be nice by now. 
Jane and I don’t have our regular riding shoes, just sandals, so we’ve been using plastic shopping bags to keep our feet warm and dry. Yes, it has been raining as well, along with 30 km headwinds, it has been a challenge.
We’ve ridden 650 km from Barcelona and are currently in Sahagun, Spain, nearing Leon, Spain. It has been a challenge. I have been on the air on the ham radio a few times, but it is difficult to predict when will be the next time, survival is more important at the moment. I did get on yesterday, but then there was a big contest going, and my little peanut whistler wasn’t too effective in getting through all the noise. I worked one station in France. As yet, no American contacts, although I have heard a few stations.
WiFi connections are often difficult to find, so I haven’t been posting much here. Since I also spend considerable time maintaining the bicycles, Jane has had more time to post photos and information on her blog at womanonherway.com , I suggest you hop over there and check it out, she’s doing a really good job.
Sorry this is so short, I’m really tired and need to rest. More to follow when there is time.
Dennis, K1YPP

Radio Amateur activity from K1YPP this summer.

Many of the Three Hundred Zeroes readers are radio amateurs (hams). The previous post describes my wanderings around Europe this summer. If you’re a radio amateur, I’d want to invite you to try and connect with me while hiking/biking this summer.

Starting in early May, until possibly mid-October, I should be active on Morse code (CW) from Spain, Portugal, U.K., Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Holland and possibly Germany and Denmark. As yet, there are no firm plans, so many things can go wrong on a journey of this magnitude, so it wouldn’t be wise to plan too precisely. If you’re a ham over there, please do contact me, maybe we can meet along the way!

I will attempt to operate from each of those countries and as a rule will operate on the 40/30/20 meter bands. Most often, I will be found on the 40 meter band, that seems to be the most popular and reliable. I managed to work four stateside stations last time, and I didn’t have that much time to actually operate, this time, I should have considerably more time.

Whenever possible, if I can find a WiFi connection, I will post my activity on the QRPspots.com site. This is a site that “Tweets” short messages about operator activity. Since I won’t have a cell phone that works in Europe, I will have to hope I can find a WiFi connection so I can Tweet from my Kindle. I was fairly successful doing this in 2011, on the Spain tour, so it should work well again.

So, dust off the old Morse code key, keep an eye on QRPspots.com and I hope to hear you while out there.

73′

K1YPP

Adventures and A Few More Zeroes

I’m currently trying to finish up work on the next book, A Few More Zeroes: Lost with the wind and the stars on the Camino de Santiago. It has been a long time in coming. Authors should always work to make the next book better than the first, and that is the case here.

Life always manages to get in the way of any project, and this is no exception. There are already readers that have ordered a copy, and it isn’t even in print (or Ebook yet!). Hopefully, this will change soon.

Here is what the future holds: Jane and I are heading off to Europe for a while. We’re taking a “transition” cruise on the Norwegian Cruise Line ship, the Epic. It leaves Miami in late April, and arrives in Barcelona at the beginning of May. I see this as an 11 day period to finish up the work on the book and get it off to the editor. The editor will take the time necessary to work her magic and transform my scribblings into something enjoyable and legible.

Once the editing phase is completed, it is a matter of DAYS to take the completed manuscript and have it into print and on Ebooks. Such are the times. Not too long ago, in the traditional publishing world, that period of time could have been years. With POD (Print On Demand) Publishing, this is no longer the case.

Once we arrive in Spain, the cruise destination, we’ll disembark with our bicycles at Barcelona. We plan to then ride the bikes from Barcelona to Logroño, Spain and then onto Santiago. In Santiago, we have arranged to store the bikes, and then take a train to Lisbon, Portugal. From there, we will walk back to Santiago, something like 400 miles. This is known as the Portuguese Camino.

From Santiago, we’ll take the bikes to Santander, Spain, and a ferry to Portmouth, U.K. Plans get somewhat fuzzy beyond there. We plan to follow the wonderful bike routes in the U.K., known as the www.sustrans.com network. This network is a series of bicycle “superhighways,” and covers all of the U.K. We plan to ride up to Hadrians Wall and walk it. We’ll then go back, get the bikes and possibly go over to Ireland for a while.

This is where things really get obscure. One of my ulterior motives is to research places my father visited during World War II. He was in the 82nd Airborne Paratrooper Division and the 101st and 505th airborne regiments. He saw action in five combat jumps: North Africa, Sicily, Italy, D-Day (Ste. Me’re Eglise, Normandy, France) and Nijmegen, Holland. Additionally, he was trucked into Bastogne, Belgium for the Battle of the Bulge.

If you readers have ever read the book by Cornelius Ryan, The Longest Day, or seen the movie, you may not have been aware of it, but my father played a part in that book. I was a young lad, when I recall Mr. Ryan coming to our home to interview my father for the book. My father would have been 100 years old this year, I figured I owe him a tribute for all he went through. I have other books that have photos of the tree he landed in during the D-Day invasion. He was hanging about 25 feet above the ground, with a Nazi machine gunner shooting at him. He cut his parachute cords and fell to the ground and they didn’t hit him. In the panic, he did cut off the top of his thumb, but didn’t even feel it.

He was also injured in Nijmegen, and due to that injury, he eventually met my mother, a nurse with the British Army. At Bastogne, he nearly froze to death.

It will be interesting to trace his steps and see what I can find. Maybe you’ll enjoy reading his story? Hopefully, it won’t take as long as the current work has. In his case, I do already have tons of material to work from. I’ll guarantee, it is a very interesting story.

Stay tuned.  

We’ve woven a complicated technical web.

A few days ago, I received a problem report ticket from Amazon:

Text in your book is unreadable for readers using black or sepia color schemes.”

It is a rather cryptic message and didn’t give any details about solutions. It did give a link to the Kindle formatting page: Guide to Kindle Content Quality. The guide gave very little useful information about the issue.

Ultimately, I went off on an Internet search and eventually discovered that I wasn’t alone, others had received emails such as mine, but there were no real solutions. The original problem, which wasn’t readily apparent, is the newer Kindles, such as the Fire, can display the book with a black background with white text. Several authors took the attitude that viewing a document with white-on-black letters was so “80’s.” I didn’t exactly see this as a healthy attitude or solution to the problem. We authors can’t always know the reasons our customers do things.

I originally wrote and published my book using Microsoft’s Word. I no longer have Word, it proved too arcane and difficult to use, not to mention, expensive. I’ve since migrated to OpenOffice.org and their Writer tool. It is user friendly and offers all the same bells and whistles as MS Word, and is free! (they DO appreciate donations)

For reasons I won’t go into here, when I first published Three Hundred Zeroes, I was able to upload the document to Amazon’s Kindle site as a MS Word document. Recently, I had to make some changes to the document and decided to do all the work in HTML (a language used to write web sites). The tools I have are not very robust for such work, but I’m sufficiently comfortable with HTML at the source code level and can fix things where needed.

In January, I did an update of the Kindle version of the book, uploaded it to Amazon’s KDP site (their Kindle interface) and thought I was done. Then came the email, I wasn’t done, apparently.

I couldn’t find a solution in any of the OpenOffice forums, so I posted my problem. Usually, within an hour or two, someone will respond with a solution. I waited. Nothing. I then decided that I had to dig in and find the problem. It occurred to me that the HTML for the book has various “styles” defined. The styles guide the electronic viewing equipment (computer, Ebook, Iphone, etc.) with instructions on how to display the information.

After diving into the HTML code I found that it did indeed have some CSS definitions, and in there, I did find a few that explicitly defined that the text should be “black,” using code #000000. Black text, on a black background means a black screen!

The definitions defined the basic text (P) and a few of the headers (H2, H3 and H4) as black. I fixed just the “P” (for paragraph) and loaded it back into my Kindle simulator. Sure enough, I was now able to read white text on a black screen for the paragraphs and the H1 headers. Problem solved!. I went back and fixed all of the parameters to use “automatic” colors, instead of “fixed” colors.

It has since been posted and updated on Amazon. If you already have a copy of the book, pester Amazon for the updated version (11 March, 2013.) They probably haven’t sent out word about the fix yet, but if they get enough requests, they will.

Several technological areas collided to cause this problem. First of all, when I first wrote and published this book on Kindle, it wasn’t capable of being displayed in this fashion. Since I originally posted it with MS Word, it probably would have worked in the newer units, since I didn’t have CSS code defining colors. When I saved the file in OpenOffice as an HTML file, it wouldn’t allow me to turn on the automatic color feature, which means, let the viewing device control color. In spite of all of this, I’m really surprised that the Kindle code doesn’t inspect the CSS to see if there is a request for black print, on a black background. It should, and it should force the text to white under those conditions, that just stands to reason.

These technical devices we use these days are extremely complicated and I can only imagine that these sorts of problems will continue to crop up. They are designed by humans, and we’re not infallible.

Which trail is your favorite?

I’m often asked, “Which hike did you
like better, the Camino de Santiago, Spain, or the Appalachian
Trail?” Answering that question is like answering to which child
you like better, you can’t answer that.

They are both very different
experiences. It is like comparing sailing on a private yacht, vs. a
cruise ship. Both have advantages and disadvantages.

The private yacht offers, well, privacy
and yet allows freedom to sail where you wish and follow your whims.
Meals are quiet, and entertainment tends to be with a few other
guests and solitary activities, such as watching videos, reading or
maintaining the yacht.

The cruise ship on the other hand has a
defined route and schedule. The ship is not very “private,”
except for your cabin. There are group events, shows, huge dining
areas and the experience is more like that of a floating city
neighborhood.

The Camino is more like the private
yacht. There is no well defined route to follow. We followed the most
popular route, from St. Jean Pied du Port, France, to Santiago de
Compostela, a wonderful 500 mile (800 km) walk through some of the
most spectacular countryside in Europe. It is rife with castles,
ancient villages, scenic vistas and culture. However, the route we
took, known as the Camino Francés, is one of many and even it is not
well defined.

I’m currently working on finishing my
story of that hike and I find it striking how many times we were lost
on this “route.” Unlike the A.T., it is not as well marked and
many times we had to decide on which path to take, there were
choices, some longer, some shorter.

The A.T., on the other hand, is a well
defined, 2,176 mile (in 2008) path that is marked with white “blazes”
and I never needed a map. Oddly, the A.T. wanders through woods,
mountains, hills, and other places that would seem to make it
difficult to follow, but it rarely was. The Camino, on the other
hand, goes almost directly west, from one village, town or city, to
the next and yet can perplex and confuse the hiker.

In the photo, the white blaze, on the left, was partially eaten by a bear, you can see the claw marks. Those blazes were distinguishable and clear for the entire length of the A.T., provided bears weren’t eating them. The image on the right shows the yellow arrows used to mark the Camino. They were often vague, inconsistent and puzzling. Here, even the person painting the arrow wasn’t certain and painted a question mark over the arrow!

Which did I like better? I loved them
both! I can’t pick a winner, they are both world class and deserve to
stand alone. They’re both my favorite children.

Book Fair in Sarasota, FL on 3 November, 2012

Just a quick post to let readers know we’re having a book fair in Sarasota, FL, tomorrow, on November 3. It is on State St., from 7am until 1pm. It should be a nice day, if a bit chilly in the early hours. It is a very eclectic collection of authors, with all sorts of works. If you’re in town, do stop by and check out some new reading material.

Jane Blanchard will also be there with her new work, Women of the Way: Embracing the Camino.
Books make great gifts for the holidays, and the prices are certainly right at these events.
All the best.
Dennis, K1

Trail food: “What’s in your backpack?

One of the most asked questions I hear
is: “What do eat on the trail?” I started to write some Tweets
about this yesterday:

Tweets,
by their very nature are brief and can lack refined grammar
structure, but you get the idea. Men and women on the trail eat many
of the same things, but the women do have a strong leaning to things
chocolate.

Deciding
what to bring along for subsistence on a long hike can be
challenging. More often than not, it is dictated by one’s economical
situation. For those with limited funds, the choices are very limited.
First there is the decision around whether to cook meals or just
carry cold foods. Cold foods have distinct advantages on the trail: there is no need to carry a stove and fuel, plus, one can eat quick meals. 
The
downside of eating cold is obvious, it can prove boring and in cold
weather, the additional heat from warm food can be a real comfort.

In
my own case, I did carry a stove and would often have a warm meal at
night. On a few occasions I even stopped along the way to make hot
tea or cocoa. On some of the colder mornings, I would prepare hot
oatmeal, and I have to admit, really appreciated it.

Most
mornings laziness won out and I would gobble down a Pop Tart (cold)
or bagels and cream cheese or peanut butter. I’d wash it down with
Gatorade. It all really depended on my mood and how rushed I was.

Lunch
was almost always, cold. If I could carry something from an overnight
stay, it would be a deli-prepared sandwich. Otherwise it was usually more
bagels, or tortilla flat bread, and tuna or canned herring. To make
things more interesting, I would also allow myself the luxury of
some good grade cookies for desert.

Snacks
along the way were usually a candy bar, such as Snickers, Milky Way,
or Paydays. In normal, everyday life, I never eat these things, but
on the trail, I had them often. The body just craves calories.

My
evening meal was typically pasta or bean based. Most often, due
to availability and cost, the Knorr/Lipton side dish meals won out.
Even though the packages indicate cooking times of 15-20 minutes for
many of them, I found that if I boiled water and then just let the
meal sit in the water, with the stove turned off, they would still
cook adequately. Instead of the recommended butter or margarine, I used olive oil. Olive oil is high in calories and worked
well as a substitute. The biggest difficulty was finding small enough
quantities of olive oil to carry in the pack. When in town, I would
usually try to find other hikers that were also looking for some
olive oil and then we would split the container. Often, containers of
olive oil could be found in the hostels along the way.

The
evening meal was always the largest meal of the day. Accompanying the
pasta or beans, I would have something bread-based, as well as packaged meat
or fish, such as tuna, sardines, corned beef, or pepperoni. I tried
to have variety. As the hike up the AT progressed, I found myself
cooking more and more couscous and really enjoying it. Best of all,
it takes very little cooking energy and yet offers tremendous
nutritional energy. In my mountain bike racing days, I always had couscous on the day before a race, and it proved a valuable ally. I
preferred the Near East couscous because it came with a flavor
packet. I would remove it from it’s box, since the boxes are half
empty and would take up valuable backpack space, and repackage the
couscous in a plastic zip bag. The bags could be used over and over
again.

Each
hiker finds what works for him or her. I heard of one fellow that hiked the
entire AT eating nothing but peanut butter. It does have most of the
nutrients needed, but I would think it a bit boring. To each, his or her own.

What
I ate on the trail worked for me. I’d love to hear from you readers,
what works for you? Write a comment and let the rest of us know.