Navy News
Direct from the front-line, the official newspaper of the Royal Navy, Navy News, brings you the latest news, features and award winning photos every month.
The Falmouth-based vessel has just arrived in the Middle East to take over from her sister Cardigan Bay, which spent a good three years providing fuel, food, spare parts and ammunition to mine warfare forces operating out of Bahrain.
She does so via a process known as ‘rafting up’ – berthing alongside minehunters in the mid-ocean with giant fenders to prevent the vessels damaging each other.
To put her to the test as the afloat forward support base (the official term for ‘mother ship’) – and to give the minehunters a bit of a workout too – all four of the Royal Navy’s force in Bahrain, HMS Penzance, Middleton, Chiddingfold and Bangor, plus two US Navy Avenger-class vessels, USS Sentry and Gladiator, put to sea for a fortnight.
Training opportunities like this have provided RFA Lyme Bay with the chance to refine our rafting skills and demonstrate that she is ready in all respects to carry out her duties.
Capt Paul Minter
Over those two weeks RFA Lyme Bay passed a total of 4,500 rounds of assorted ammunition, 50 tonnes of fuel and various assorted stores to the four UK MCMs.
Over a particularly busy period three vessels were resupplied in one day, enabling the minehunters to effectively continue their mission.
And just for good measure there was the small matter of a dummy minefield for the Anglo-American force to clear.
“Training opportunities like this have provided RFA Lyme Bay with the chance to refine our rafting skills and demonstrate that she is ready in all respects to carry out her duties as the afloat forward support base in the Gulf,” said Lyme Bay’s Commanding Officer Capt Paul Minter.
Direct from the front-line, the official newspaper of the Royal Navy, Navy News, brings you the latest news, features and award winning photos every month.