No wasted space in tight quarters
of attack sub USS Bremerton
Story and photos by Mark Oliva,
Okinawa bureau

USS Bremerton, a
nuclear-powered attack submarine, sits pierside at White Beach Naval Facility on Okinawa
during a port visit. |
Petty Officer 1st Class Erik Formo dreams about steak dinners, a bed to himself and hot
showers.
"Two weeks before we get anywhere, we constantly talk about what were going
to eat," Formo said. "I usually have a list of my meals for the first week
home."
Aboard the USS Bremerton, a nuclear-powered Los Angeles Class attack submarine, Formo
has little else to do in his off time.
Hes part of the Navys silent service, spending weeks and even months
cruising the ocean floor with 130 other sailors.
Formo offered a glimpse inside the life of a submarine sailor while the USS Bremerton
was pierside at White Beach Naval Facility on Okinawa during Annual Exercise 2001.
Formo was born to be a submariner. Both of his grandfathers were submariners in World
War II. Hes served on submarines for 14 of his 16 years in the Navy. For a time, he
worked aboard a destroyer tender, but it didnt compare to his sub tours.
"One of the biggest pros is I work with a better class of people," he said.
"Theres a tighter camaraderie. Were all pretty close."

Navy Lt. Cmdr. Eric
Holloway, executive officer for USS Bremerton, explains how the submarine's persicope
operates. |
Close on a submarine carries a different meaning than the rest of the Navy. USS
Bremerton is only 362 feet long and 33 feet wide at its widest point, but thats not
all living space.
Much of the submarine is occupied by the nuclear reactor that drives the boat. The nose
of the submarine houses advanced sonar detection equipment, a combination of 22 torpedoes
and Tomahawk cruise missiles, and the four 21-inch tubes that launch them.
Not an inch of space is wasted on the Bremerton.
The submarine makes its own water and recycles air, so the limiting factor of how long
they can stay underwater is the amount of food they can carry around 90 days
worth.
Even the submarines mess decks, arguably the largest open space on the submarine,
double as storage areas. Food stores are stuffed into the benches where sailors sit to
eat.
But thats not the only use for the six-table room. It doubles as a classroom, an
entertainment area and whatever else the crew needs.
"This is like the living room in your house," said Lt. Cmdr. Eric Holloway,
USS Bremertons executive officer. "All over the submarine, we store food. As
the deployment goes on, we gradually eat our way down."

Navy Petty Officer 1st
Class Erik Formo shows off his rack aboard USS Bremerton. This is the only space Formo has
to call his own, for sleeping, storage and relaxation. |
The cooks serve four meals a day, while the crew works 18-hour shift cycles, never
seeing the days pass, but always knowing how many days are left before reaching home port.
"Everybody tracks the days, but its not worth it," Formo said.
"Its like the movie Groundhog Day. Its the same thing over
and over."
The Pearl Harbor-based crews deployments are six-month mission across the
Pacific. They stay hidden most of time, location known only by the crew and the
Pentagons selected top brass.
"We start off with a schedule, but the deployments never stay on schedule,"
said Petty Officer 1st Class Matthew Gray. "We have a lot of underway time. On this
deployment, in our first three months, we had five days off. Were supposed to be out
for six months and in port for 18 months. But it usually gets bumped up. It normally runs
about six months out, and 12 months in port."
That schedule is particularly tough on Grays family. He leaves a wife and four
children each time USS Bremerton sails.
"Theres no way to contact anybody," Gray explained. "Theres
no getting a hold of your family. My youngest kids, they dont understand. My
4-year-old wont talk to me on the phone when I call from a port. Im sure
its tougher on my wife than me."
The long periods of silence hit the crew hard. Formo said on one recent deployment, two
crewmembers didnt find out about significant family problems until they were two
days from pulling in to Pearl Harbor.

Navy Lt. Cmdr. Eric
Holloway, executive officer for USS Bremerton, explains how busy the mess decks are for
the 130-man crew. |
Sailors assigned to surface vessels often tell the submariners they would consider life
on USS Bremerton unbearable.
"People always say I couldnt stay under the water that
long," Gray said, "especially when they hear about the extended runs where
food starts to go downhill. I dont think they understand. Theyd have to come
down and do it."
The Navys submariners are all volunteers, choosing to spend their tours under the
oceans surface. But that all-volunteer force is a bit of a misnomer, Formo said.
"We are an all-volunteer force," he explained. "But once you volunteer,
you cant un-volunteer yourself. Youre designated submariners, and your job
from then on out is to work on subs.
"For me, I dont mind," Formo added. "Ive been on a destroyer
tender and it was nice to see sunrises and sunsets, but I believe the people down here are
better. It comes down to how long do you think you can tolerate it. Ive got five
more years. I think I can do it."
But with limited space, cramped quarters and never knowing whats going on
outside, sailors find ways to make their life a little cozier.
"You pack the essentials," said Petty Officer 2nd Class Emmanuel Soriano.
"Plenty of underwear and socks are part of the essentials. So are toiletries and lots
of extras, because you never know if youll run out. We pack a minimum of three sets
of coveralls, a couple of dungarees and our dress uniforms. Throw in a couple sets of
civilian clothes for port calls, and weve pretty much filled up our storage
spaces."
Their bunks, or racks in naval terminology, are stacked three high, with barely enough
room to stand in the middle to get dressed. The racks, only about two-feet high and
six-feet long, also double as the sailors individual storage area. There are 117
racks on USS Bremerton, for a crew that can be as many as 140, meaning, some sailors have
to "hot rack," or share their beds while theyre on duty.
"The storage area we have is about three inches deep," Formo said.
"Its just enough so that a soda can fits in perfectly."
Formo fills what little space he has left with Halloween candy, a comfort food he doles
out to the crew.
"Everybody has a CD player," Soriano added. "It helps to block out
everything else and gives you your time."
Cramped quarters and ship-life frustrations sometimes make time alone a precious
commodity. Gray, towering well over 6-feet tall, has to duck under almost everything,
including when he showers in a stainless steel stall thats about five inches too
short for his frame. The shower nozzle hits him at neck level.
"Everybody gets tense toward the end," Gray said. "People are tired of
looking at the same old faces. You learn not to talk to anyone for the first half hour or
so after they get up."
But the frustrations rarely boil over.
In his 14 years under the sea, Formo can only remember two cases where frustrations
came to blows.
"And only one of those was a case where punches were thrown. They were two best
friends, and one guy just said something wrong and the other popped him."
But thats where it ended.
Gray said the people who cant handle life on a submarine are usually weeded out,
finding shore-based duties or opting out of the Navy.
Frustrations aside, none of the three sailors said they would choose duties elsewhere
if they could.
Gray has served on attack submarines such as USS Bremerton as well as the Navys
"boomers," the Trident nuclear submarines carrying intercontinental nuclear
missiles.
USS Bremerton is Sorianos first submarine, but he wants to stay because of the
increased responsibility and better chances for earning qualification badges and
promotions. Formo, who tallied time on surface vessels and a tour on shore duty, said he
expects to remain in the deep until his retirement, just a few years away.
"Id still do it," Formo said. "Its just a different attitude
in the surface fleet. I dont feel like I could just walk up to one of the chiefs and
shoot the breeze.
Back to November stories
Page Two news roundup
Stories from October, 2001
Stories from September, 2001
Stories from August, 2001
Stories from July, 2001
Stories from June, 2001
Stories from May, 2001
Stories from April, 2001
Stories from March, 2001
Stories from February,2001
Stories from January, 2001
Stories from December, 2000
Stories from November, 2000
Stories from October, 2000
Stories from August and September, 2000
Stories from June and July, 2000
Home |