Page 13 - br-june-2020
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June 2020                             June 2020


                                OBITUARIES

                 Shortly  before  Geoffrey  was  posted  to  Germany  to  join  his  first
                 regimen, in September 1955, he asked Joan to marry him, and this
         they did at Christmas the following year.
         Their  children  have  told  them  that  it  was  very  irresponsible  to  marry  after
         knowing one another for such a short time, most of which was spent apart!
         However,  Geoffrey  and  Joan  were  quite  sure  that  they  were  right  for  one
         another,  a  fact  proved  by  over  sixty-three  years  of  happy  marriage.  Living
         accommodation was in very short supply in Germany, so Joan could not join
         Geoffrey until the following autumn. She resigned her teaching job at the end
         of  the  summer  term,  just  before  finding  out  that  Geoffrey's  regiment  was
         moving  to  a  place  where  accommodation  was  even  more  scarce.
         Nevertheless,  they  decided  that  two  years  was  long  enough  to  have  been
         apart, and bought a caravan built for living in at the 1957 Caravan Exhibition
         in London, and, as they owned only a motorbike and sidecar, had it sent out
         to Germany by rail.
         They were on leave in England when the caravan arrived at the local station
         in Germany, so when their friend received a message asking him to collect a
         parcel  for  Mr.  Booth,  he  was  startled  to  see  the  size  of  the  "parcel",  and
         returned with an Army truck to tow it to the farm where it was to be sited for
         the next couple of years, three miles from the barracks.
         Geoffrey and Joan lived happily in a field, shared with chickens, twelve ducks
         and a hand-reared lamb called Pieter, which was culled and replaced every
         year. When they were invited to join the annual feast involved, they found it
         hard to find excuses for not attending, but couldn't face eating their friend
         Pieter.
         The  regiment's  colonel  got  used  to  Geoffrey's  living  arrangements,  after
         sending his wife to inspect the caravan, though he was not impressed when,
         during heavy snow that prevented Geoffrey coming to work on his motorbike,
         he arrived in the barracks on the local dung cart.
         For  the  last  six  months  of  their  time  in  the  caravan,
         they were joined by Sara, who was born in the local
         Canadian  Army  hospital,  when  Geoffrey  was  on
         exercise  in  Belgium.  After  just  over  two  years  in  the
         caravan, word came that Geoffrey was to be posted
         back  to  England,  and  the  regiment  was  to  be
         disbanded. He had bought a large, ancient Opel car
         when  Sara  was  born,  and  decided  to  tow  the
         caravan  to  the  Midlands,  where  he  was  to  be
         stationed.

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