Pearl Harbour

Author
Discussion

Nic Jones

Original Poster:

7,069 posts

221 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all
Where the hell am I supposed to start a topic about this?

Boats, boats, boats - Plenty of fecking great boats were sunk by the plucky Japs

Air, Sea & Land Matters - Lots of Mitsubishi EVO X's aircraft (I believe were used by the plucky Japs)

TV & Films - A st film was made about it.

Answers on a postcard please....


Anyway, onto the real topic, is there much left at Pearl Harbour to look at now, are there any wrecks/museums to look at documenting the attack?

Puggit

48,527 posts

249 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all
I'll try posting again...

Worst ever "I'm going to Hawaii post ever".

Shove it in 'holidays and travel', were it belongs wink

newberry

473 posts

199 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all
Nic Jones said:
Where the hell am I supposed to start a topic about this?

Boats, boats, boats - Plenty of fecking great boats were sunk by the plucky Japs
The boat section.

Gargamel

15,032 posts

262 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all

Arizona is still there as a museum to the attack

f13ldy

1,432 posts

202 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all
I've been over it in a helicopter in 2006.

Just looking at my photos there are some boats, buildings and a very long but not very high bridge...

HTH. Probably not though.

JRM

2,043 posts

233 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all
yes there is a bit to see there, I went a few years ago and there is a memorial to those that died, worth a visit if you are in the area, and of course you can see teh Arizona under the water.

Fezant Pluckah

1,711 posts

212 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
quotequote all
I've been to Pearl harbour a couple of times.

To be honest, the Arizona is a bit of an anti climax as it is underwater except for the mounts for the main gun turrets, and the water's pretty murky too, so you can't see much else. There's also usually a long queue to get from the dock across to the memorial.

HOWEVER, there are lots of other good things to see. On the mainland there is the USS Bowfin, a submarine, that you can have a look around, as well as lots of other WW2 stuff including a Japanese Kaiten kamikaze sub. Best of all is on Ford Island, near the Arizona Memorial, where you can look around the Iowa-class battleship USS Missouri, which is pretty impressive. Certainly more so than HMS Belfast!

It's haalf a day to see what they have on offer. You don't need a day. I'd spend the rest of the time drinking cocktails on Waikiki and oggling the whales (and the large marine mammals that you may see out at sea.)

Nic Jones

Original Poster:

7,069 posts

221 months

Thursday 9th April 2009
quotequote all
Gazboy said:
When we went to Waikiki in 2003 the authorities were very strict about what you could wear and what you could take to Pearl Harbour. You couldn't wear shoes, must be flip-flops/sandals, no jackets or multi-layers. No handbags, wallets, glasses cases, cameras, phones or keys. There were a lot of very upset & angry people at our hotel that had been turned away by the authorities just for wearing shoes.

Check before you travel to see if the rules have been relaxed.
That's quite odd, why did they do that?

It will be quite interesting seeing evidence of the same(ish) war but on the other side of the globe.

rupert the dog

1,433 posts

218 months

Thursday 9th April 2009
quotequote all
Yep, plenty to see, and the memorial is quite moving. Worth a trip.

Puggit

48,527 posts

249 months

Thursday 9th April 2009
quotequote all
If anyone's interested, there's a relic of Pearl Harbour history at the bottom of the Atlantic, lying on the seabed off the Falklands wink