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SHARKHUNTERS
"Patrol in North Germany - 1999"
So many veterans were with us;
and we went to many places off limits to others.
Hans-Georg Hess, Skipper of U-995
This person took someone else's tour to Germany
Our 1999 "Patrol in North Germany" began as do all our 'Patrols'
in that area - with a cruise of the Hamburg Harbor in our own chartered
boat. This is an ice breaker where our participants can meet each other as
well as the German veterans who take this cruise with us. There is an
honors bar where we can buy soft drinks, wine and beer as we see this centuries
old harbor - cameras clicking all the while.
There was beautiful scenery everywhere you looked on our two hour Harbor Tour
After our 'Harbor Patrol', we returned to our hotel to freshen up.
This hotel is owned by a Knights Cross
winning U-Boat Skipper, Captain Otto Westphalen, and so we are treated as
family. In the evening, we enjoy our Welcome Banquet where we are joined
by a great many U-Boat Skippers, officers and crew. After the dinner, all
are happy to sign autographs.
Photo right shows some of our honored guests. From the left they are:
Leutnant Adolf Schmidt; Skipper of an AA Flak boat in the English Channel;
Fregattenkapitän Gerd Thäter, Skipper of U-466
and U-3506;
Oberleutnant z.S. Otto
Westphalen, Skipper of U-968, Knights
Cross;
Oberleutnant z.S. Matthias Brünig, Skipper of U-108 and then a
training Skipper;
Oberleutnant z.S. Günther Heinrich, Skipper of U-960, the last
boat through Gibraltar;
Volkmar König, midshipman on U-99 under Kretschmer.
Our deluxe motorcoach greets us on Monday and we enjoy a short ride through the
German countryside to Laboe, a suburb of Kiel, where we spend time at the German
Navy Memorial and also U-995. This is the only Type VII-C
U-Boat left in the world, and we always have the pleasure of her former
Skipper with us to tell us about his five war patrols. Our very good
friend and SHARKHUNTERS Member Captain Hans-Georg Hess (Knights
Cross) is always glad to have us
aboard his old boat. At barely 21 years of age, Hess was the youngest
combat submarine Skipper in any navy in World War II, possibly in all of
history.
A small part of our group assembles by U-995. The rest are
still aboard.
Our lunch is at the quaint Seeterrassen Restaurant across the road from U-995
and we enjoy our meal with these great veterans at our tables. After lunch
is one of the high points of this tour - we were joined by a lead engineer of,
well - that's all we can say. We cannot divulge who he is, what shipyard he
works for or what he told us. It was a great seminar is all we can say.
After this seminar, our motorcoach takes us around Kiel Harbor to Möltenort on
the other side, where we find the U-Boat Memorial. Here are bronze tablets
for each German U-Boat sunk in either World Wars. Each tablet has the name
of the Commander, whether he was lost or not - then it has the names of each
crew member who was killed in action. This is a solemn place, and we have
a short service of remembrance and lay a wreath in front of the Memorial.
It is a very quiet and sad place. SHARKHUNTERS sends about $1,000
to this special place each year - about 12,000 German Marks thus far.
Some of the veterans with us at the
Memorial
We remember those who did not return
Tuesday morning finds us at another place where SHARKHUNTERS and very few
others are welcome; the fantastic Naval Museum of SHARKHUNTERS Member
Peter Tamm. This museum is not open to the public, but our groups are
welcome. This is probably the most fully complete naval museum in the
world and the quality and presentation of the exhibits are unequaled anywhere in
the world. The sheer number of items in each exhibit is
overwhelming. It is a fantastic place!
Always something to see in this Museum -
even a former DDR patrolboat in the outside display
We then visited the grave of GrossAdmiral Karl Dönitz and placed flowers
there. It is a beautiful but sad spot, and at his feet are two stones to
remember his two sons who died in World War II.
Then our motorcoach rolled westward for about an hour to our new hotel in
Bremen, but we stopped at a little restaurant along the way where we could each
try our hand at ordering German food off the menu. It worked quite well,
and everyone was happy with their menu selections. Naturally, our veterans
helped.
Below is the breakfast spread each morning
at our hotel in Bremen - outstanding!
Next morning, after a leisurely and sumptuous breakfast at our hotel, we went to
Steinhuder Meer for our boat ride to the fortress castle Wilhelmstein, where the
first German submarine was tested more than 200 years ago. We walked
through the castle, had snacks at the little outdoor cafe, then back to shore
where we had a short visit at a very special shop. We could buy genuine
Third Reich artifacts from this shop.
Crossing Steinhuder
Meer
the Fortress Castle Wilhelmstein
Our next stop was at Bordenau and the ancestral home of General
Scharnhorst. This is a private home where a direct descendant of the
General is living today. She is a friend of ours and opens this place for us to
visit. She also has her cook prepare some of the best pea soup in the
world! Our Member Phil Waite set a new SHARKHUNTERS record here by
eating seven large bowls of this great soup - and that was after he had a huge
sandwich. Who will better Phil's record on another 'Patrol'?
We'll see.
Bordenau: many famous people sat in this chair - the Crown Prince, von
Ribbentrop, Bormann, Himmler......
We then went to visit a beautifully restored Ju 52 that
participated in the Norway Invasion. She landed on a frozen lake and with
the spring thaws, she and about a dozen other 'Alte Tante Ju' aircraft
sank to the bottom. This one is magnificently restored. There are
many other vintage aircraft on the grounds, and we were given free rein to go
around AND through them all.
Thursday was a day at the beautiful Luftwaffe Museum in a nearby town, and the
Director of the Museum closed it to the public for the morning we were
there. We were given free run of the museum, and there were Luftwaffe
veterans there to visit with us and when we had our lunch there in the museum,
they joined us for that too. The afternoon was at leisure back in Bremen,
so many of our group took the short bus ride to the old center of the city for
souvenir shopping.
Friday found us in Wilhelmshaven, where we had a short tour of the Wilhelmshaven
Navy Base then to another spot where we visited a 205 Class submarine of
the German Navy as well as other craft. For lunch, we retired to a quiet
little spot planned by our friend and Member, Gerd Thäter. Gerd was the
Skipper of U-466 (Type VII-C) and U-3506 (Type
XXI) during the war, and this day he brought many of his crew and other
Skippers to have lunch with us. We had a great time and as always, the
veterans signed autographs.
Friday evening was our Farewell Dinner, as we have only a couple
days left on our 'Patrol'. We rented out a very exclusive country
club for this great dinner and naturally, were joined by many more veterans and
of course, they all signed autographs freely.
We certainly ate well on this 'Patrol'.
Most of us went home a little heavier than when we arrived.
On Saturday morning, we visited a very special German Navy facility that is off
limits to even most German Naval personnel. We can neither describe it nor
show photos of it, but we got a great slide presentation of this place during
World War II then a guided tour.
We then headed to Bremerhaven and the waterfront there. We had lunch at
our pick of the sidewalk cafes there, then toured at our leisure aboard U-2540,
the only Type XXI boat left in the world. There were other vessels
to visit as well, and we toured them all.
Our group in Bremerhaven - you can see the Type XXI boat to the right.
Then we were back to our hotel for our final night in Germany. This time
was at leisure so people could visit with new friends, do some final souvenir
shopping, reflect on the fantastic places they had gone and the wonderful people
they had met. In the morning, our motorcoach took us to the airport and we
were on our way back to our home countries with great memories and a lot of
photos.
SPECIAL THANKS to our SHARKHUNTERS
Members in Germany who were instrumental in preparing this wonderful "Patrol
in North Germany". They are all veterans of the U-Bootwaffe and
the Luftwaffe, and so that is why our SHARKHUNTERS 'Patrols' are
so unique. Vielen Dank meine freunde!
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