RAN Submarine Petty Officer Mark has
been awarded a Conspicuous Service Medal in the Australia Day (January 26,
2025) honours for his rescue of a fellow submariner.
CPL 3 Michael Rogers’ article which appeared on
the Australian Submarine Agency's website
reports, January 31, 2025, at https://www.asa.gov.au/news/fear-sharks-shelved-line-duty:
“Fear of sharks shelved in the line of duty”
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Petty Officer Mark has been awarded a Conspicuous Service Medal in the Australia Day honours for his rescue of a fellow submariner. Photo Courtesy: Able Seaman Zac Dingle.
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Submariners rarely have to deal with a man overboard,
but one sailor’s action during the nightmare scenario was recognised as part of
the 2025 Australia Day Honours.
HMAS Farncomb was transiting submerged to Hawaii for
Exercise Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2022 when it started to experience a noise
interfering with the sonar.
They surfaced “pretty much smack bang in the middle of
Australia and Hawaii” so Petty Officer Mark, an acoustic warfare analyst, and
his team could investigate the noise.
After checking the hull’s forward section for anything
unexpected, Petty Officer Mark was inspecting aft of the fin when he felt the
boat lift beneath his feet.
He looked starboard and noticed a large wave
barrelling towards the sub.
Knowing he wouldn’t make it to safety in time, he
shouted a warning to his team on the forward hull, took shelter on the port
side of the fin, and braced as the wave washed over the bow.
When he looked forward he saw one of his sonar
analysts thrown backwards and washed overboard, weighed down by a bag of tools.
Unable to tell if his shipmate’s life jacket had
inflated or if he was injured, Petty Officer Mark leapt into the ocean after
him.
He swam to his shipmate to ensure he wasn’t hurt and
steered him away from the submarine’s propeller.
They waited about 30 minutes for Farncomb to manoeuvre
and pick them up.
During the wait, Petty Officer Mark remembered why he
hadn’t participated in a swim exercise during 17 years in Navy – a fear of
sharks.
“It didn’t even cross my mind. I remember the water
coming towards me when I dived in and thinking ‘all safety is lost’, because I
knew we would be alone and isolated,” Petty Officer Mark said.
“It wasn't until I started swimming with Adrian in
between my legs and items from the tool bag started popping up around me that
it was like, oh, there could be some hungry fish here.”
Petty Officer Mark reached in his pocket to check his
knife was still there.
“It was tiny and not going to do anything, but [the
shark] was going to earn [the kill],” he said.
After being hauled back on board and making sure his
mate was in good spirits, Petty Officer Mark made his way down the conning
tower to the “days since last incident” count in the seniors’ mess.
“I walked in, still fully dressed and soaked from head
to toe, and wiped the number off the board and put a big fat 0,” he said.
“At the time my adrenaline was pumping but I just
wanted to show people that, yeah, everyone's okay and everything is fine.”
'When the letter came through with the gold crown of
the Governor-General letterhead I thought I was in trouble for something.'
Petty Officer Mark was recognised during the 2025
Australia Day Honours for his outstanding leadership and courage, awarded a
Conspicuous Service Medal for his actions.
“It was a bit of a shock, actually. When the letter
came through with the gold crown of the Governor-General letterhead I thought I
was in trouble for something,” he said.
“I haven’t known too many sailors that have been
recognised like this. So it’s a pleasant surprise but it hasn’t really set in
yet.”
Born and bred in Hobart, Petty Officer Mark joined the
Navy as a boatswain's mate after seeing a 60 Minutes story on boarding
operations in the Gulf, and after five years he wanted more of a challenge.
“As a submariner, the coolest thing you can do is
track other submarines, so that’s what led me down the sonar system path,” he
said.
“Before [Navy] I used to work at Woolworths, so it's a
long way from pushing trolleys in the carpark.”
Looking back, Petty Officer Mark doesn’t think he
would have done anything differently during the daring dive, no matter who was
swept overboard.
“It wouldn't matter what rank or role I was in or what
person it was that went, I think the reaction's the same,” he said.
“I’m still scared of sharks, though, and I probably
still won’t participate in any swim exercises.”
Original story by CPL 3 Michael Rogers.
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Pete Comment
Another biological threat to submariners are polar and brown bears, but not in the Southern Hemisphere.
The russian Navy is known to shoot them and their cubs.
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