‘That looks interesting,’ I say. ‘A work thing,
or hobby?’
‘A bit of both, actually. I’ve had a long
connection with the air force as a photographer of planes, but then principally
as an air traffic controller. I’m just finishing off some research into the
early use of radar.’
‘You know, that reminds me of something I
haven’t thought about in a long time. I was brought up in this little town
called Wisbech, out in the Fens.’
‘Yes, I’ve heard of it.’
‘There was this guy who used to run an
electrical repair shop there, just off the market. Mr Cox. Completely
unassuming, you know. Bald head, brown overalls, round glasses. A lovely guy, quietly
working away in this tiny little shop with dusty stuff for sale in the window
and radios and boxes of bits on the shelving behind him. It didn’t
matter what you brought in - a crappy old Pifco torch or a broken radio – he’d
always be able to get it going again. It was only years later I found out he’d
been some kind of commando during the war. There was a raid on a German radar
installation in France...’
‘Bruneval! Yes. Well – famous, of course.
They went over, overthrew the garrison, came back with the radar under one arm
and a German technician under the other. Amazing! And this Mr Cox, he was one
of that bunch?’
‘You’d never guess to look at him. But yeah
– a genuine hero.’
‘Well!’
I think of Mr Cox in the back of the plane,
a parachute strapped over his overalls, the jump light reflecting in his little
round glasses.
‘So – air traffic controller? That sounds pretty
stressful.’
‘It had its moments.’
‘How on earth do you keep track of
everything?’
‘It’s a particular skill. Multi-tasking, on
a massive scale. In four dimensions, too – time, distance, height and so on.
You have to hold lots of information in your head at one time, always making
sure there’s sufficient capacity in the system for any erm.. unscheduled events.’
‘I bet you’re a good chess player.’
‘Chess? Not really. Crosswords, on the other
hand...’
‘So how do you select potential candidates?’
Air
traffic controller. Maybe I should send off for an application form – except they
probably work nights, too.
‘It’s not easy. There are psychometric
tests, of course, questionnaires, but none of them tell you all that much. It’s
more the case that once you’ve been doing the job for a while, you get to
recognise those characteristics in other people that might make them a
successful operator. It’s hard to explain – because there’s no set look. When I
think back to my time in the tower, the two people who stand out as being
particularly good were nothing at all like each other. One was a bank manager
type, very dour, and the other was this tall Scot with a bizarre sense of
humour. You couldn’t get two more different people, but they both shared the
same facility – for moving planes about.’
He folds his arms.
‘Now you’ve done it,’ he says, after a
while. ‘You’ve got me reminiscing.’
He yawns.
‘What time is it?'
‘Four o’clock.’
‘Gosh.’
I yawn, too.
We pass on through
the night, one of hundreds of call-signs, creeping across a controller’s
screen.
6 comments:
Are you really from Wisbech Spence? That's a strange coincidence, me too. My family's from Walsoken, so I'm a Fen girl through and through. Do you still live in the area?
Born in London, brought up in Wisbech, moved away some time ago now, but Mum still lives there. Can't really say where I'm living now, of course (at the risk of sounding very confused).
That's really nice. A good conversation with someone who's not crazy. Upbeat from the norm :) I can't put my finger on it, but this one just left me feeling really... good.
You never know who you're going to meet Spence.
We were having a family break a few years ago to France.We were flying into Beauvais airport.Chatting about this to one of my senior customers he was able to tell me all about the town,how long the flight would be,whereabouts in France it was,what to look for from the plane as we flew in.
After I'd finished his haircut his son (in his 50s) sat down for a trim.
"Your Dad knows a lot about Beauvais Pat"
"He should do Jack,he bombed it during the war."
Thanks Invictus.
I do have more conversations like this during each shift(thank goodness - it's how I stay sane), but I think I tend to write out the wackier or more tragic ones for some reason. I promise I'll try to correct the balance in future.
Hey Jacks. That's a great story!
Funnily enough I was chatting to someone the other day about what it might've been like to fly sorties in a bomber. They were such sitting ducks, esp. with a full load. I remember my mum telling me about a favourite cousin of hers who was a tail-gunner in a Lancaster. She remembered dancing on his shoes as a little girl - but he was lost over the Atlantic soon after, along with so many others.
Hey, you don't have to change anything. It's the wacky and tragic ones that keep us coming back, I think.
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