#raheritage
By LongJohn
There’s a certain way a Number One speaks —
calm as a Sunday morning,
sharp as a fresh sharpened knife,
and carrying enough authority
to make even the cockiest lad
stand up a bit straighter.
He didn’t need to shout.
Didn’t need to swagger.
Just a quiet, steady
“Stand by…”
and every man on the det
felt the world tighten into focus.
You learned to trust that voice —
in the rain, in the dark,
in the moments when the air itself
seemed to hold its breath.
He knew his gun
like other men know their children:
every quirk, every mood,
every sound it made
when it was happy, angry,
or about to misbehave.
And when the order came,
his voice cut through the chaos
like a lighthouse beam,
guiding you through the noise
to the one thing that mattered:
doing the job right,
first time,
every time.
Years later,
you still hear it —
that calm, unshakeable tone
that made you believe
you could hold the line
against anything.
A Number One doesn’t just command a gun.
He commands confidence.
And that’s rarer than ammunition.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 7:30 AM UTC
By LongJohn, honouring the Royal Artillery motto and spirit
They say the infantry hold the ground,
the cavalry takes the glory,
and the gunners…
well, we just change the landscape.
Our thunder isn’t borrowed —
it’s earned,
forged in steel and sweat,
carried on the backs of lads
who know exactly what it means
to serve a crown you’ll never meet
but feel in your bones.
When the order comes,
there’s no hesitation —
just the calm of men
who’ve rehearsed the end of the world
often enough to make it look tidy.
The gun speaks,
the earth answers,
and somewhere in that rolling crack
you hear the history of the regiment —
from Flanders mud
to Afghan dust,
from the smoke of Waterloo
to the cold rain of the Falklands.
We don’t shout about it.
We don’t need to.
The guns do that for us.
And when the smoke clears
and the world steadies itself,
we stand there —
boots planted,
ears ringing,
hearts steady —
knowing we’ve added our own small echo
to the King’s thunder.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 7:24 AM UTC
Direct fire — the layer’s true arena
By LongJohn
There’s nothing gentle about direct fire.
No time for poetry,
no time for second guesses —
just the sight,
the target,
and the knowledge
that the moment you squeeze the trigger
you’ve lit a ****** great arrow
pointing straight back at yourself.
That’s when the layer earns his keep.
One eye shut,
the other sharp as a knife edge,
breath held,
hands steady,
heart doing its own thing
but you ignore it.
The gun bucks,
the world flashes white,
and before the smoke even clears
you’re shouting for the next round —
because speed is life,
and accuracy is survival.
“Get them before they get you,”
that’s the rule.
Simple.
Unforgiving.
True every time.
The layer doesn’t wait for applause.
He doesn’t look up to see
if anyone noticed.
He just adjusts,
leans in again,
and finds the next target
like it personally owes him money.
And when the day’s done
and the gun cools
and the adrenaline finally lets go,
he’ll sit there quiet,
hands still trembling a bit,
knowing he did what few can do —
hit fast,
hit true,
and walk away from a job
that doesn’t forgive mistakes.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 7:35 AM UTC
By LongJohn
They told us it’d be character building.
They weren’t wrong —
just dishonest about
how much character
they planned to build in one go.
Commando training wasn’t a course,
it was a long conversation
between your body and your willpower,
with your body shouting,
and your willpower pretending
it couldn’t hear.
Rain?
A constant.
Cold?
A lifestyle.
Mud?
A religion.
But somewhere between the log runs,
the rope climbs,
the endless yomps
that made your legs question their contract,
you realised something—
you weren’t breaking—
You were sharpening.
And when you finally earned the right
to stand beside the Marines
as a Gunner —
not an honorary anything,
but a Commando Gunner —
you felt it in your bones.
Not pride exactly.
More like belonging.
A quiet, stubborn truth
that you’d gone through the same hell
and come out the other side
still standing,
still laughing,
still ready for whatever came next.
And when the green berets nodded at you
like you were one of their own,
you didn’t need a speech
or a ceremony
or a pat on the back.
You just nodded back —
because respect,
real respect,
doesn’t need noise.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 8:35 AM UTC
By LongJohn
There’s a moment, right at the end,
when the noise fades,
the smoke thins,
and the gun sits there cooling
like an old dog catching its breath.
You’ve fired all you were given,
done what was asked,
and now there’s just one round left —
the last round.
It’s never just ammunition.
It’s a marker.
A line in the sand.
A quiet nod to the lads beside you
and the ones who aren’t.
You handle it different —
not softer,
but with a kind of respect
that doesn’t need explaining.
The det feels it too.
Voices drop.
Movements sharpen.
Everyone knows the weight of it.
“Last round…”
The Number One says it calm,
like he’s announcing the weather,
but you hear the history in it —
every battery, every battle,
every gun that ever stood its ground.
The layer leans in,
the loader steadies himself,
and for a heartbeat
the whole world holds still.
Then the order comes,
the gun speaks one final time,
and the echo rolls out
like a curtain closing.
After that,
there’s no cheering,
no swagger —
just the quiet satisfaction
of a job done right
and the knowledge
that the gun will sleep tonight
because you didn’t let her down.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 7:43 AM UTC
By LongJohn
I came a long way from Nottingham —
a lad with more cheek than sense,
thinking the world was big
and I was bigger.
Then I met a 105 light gun
and learned very quickly
who was in charge.
They taught me the basics first:
boots, bearings,
don’t stand where the recoil lives.
But the real lessons came later —
the ones you only learn
when the air tastes of cordite
and the ground shakes like it’s alive.
“Keep the charge bags dry,”
the Number One barked,
and he meant it like a warning.
Six charges —
one to six —
each one a different kind of promise.
Small charge, close target.
Big charge, long reach.
Get it wrong
and the gun will tell the world
you’re an idiot.
Direct fire was a different beast.
No time to think,
no room for doubt.
The moment you fired,
you became a target yourself —
so you loaded fast,
laid faster,
and prayed the next round
would land before theirs did.
Somewhere in all that noise,
I stopped being the lad from Nottingham
and became a gunner —
one of the stubborn few
who trust a steel barrel
more than their own luck.
And I’ve carried that with me
ever since.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 7:58 AM UTC
By LongJohn
I wasn’t born into soldiering.
I was born in Carlton —
a place of terraced streets,
straight talking neighbours,
and enough character
to keep you honest.
Back then, the world felt small,
like everything important
happened within walking distance.
But something in me
wanted a bigger horizon,
a louder heartbeat,
a life that didn’t fit neatly
into the streets I knew.
So, I signed on.
Simple as that.
One decision,
and suddenly the lad from Carlton
was standing beside a 105-Pack Howitzer gun
wondering how the hell
he’d ended up here.
The regiment knocked the edges off me,
sharpened the rest,
and taught me things
you don’t learn in Carlton—
like how to trust a det
with your life,
how to read the sky for trouble,
and how to keep charge bags dry
even when the rain
is coming at you sideways.
But I never forgot where I came from.
Carlton stayed in my voice,
in my humour,
in the stubborn streak
that carried me through
more than one bad day.
And every time the gun thundered
and the ground shook under my boots,
I’d think of that lad
who left Carlton - Nottingham
looking for something bigger —
and found it
in the recoil of a gun
and the company of gunners.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 8:13 AM UTC
By LongJohn
Night firing has its own kind of tension —
a quiet that isn’t peace,
just the world holding its breath
waiting for the first order.
You work by touch at first,
hands knowing the gun
better than your eyes ever could.
The dark presses in,
thick as wet wool,
and every sound feels sharper
than it should.
But the real work starts
when the call comes down the line:
“Illumination fire.”
That’s when the battlefield changes.
Charge bags checked twice —
because if anything must stay dry,
it’s them.
Wrong charge, wrong height,
and you light up the wrong patch of earth
or worse —
you leave the Marines and Infantry
blind in the dark.
The layer leans in,
finding a sky he can’t see,
trusting the map,
the angles,
and the Number One’s voice.
“Stand by…”
and the night waits.
The gun fires,
and the world explodes into daylight —
a white flare blooming overhead,
drifting down on its parachute
like a ghost lantern.
Shadows stretch long and strange,
and for a few minutes
the battlefield is laid bare
for the lads moving forward.
Then darkness again,
as if the night is angry
you dared to interrupt it.
Round after round,
flare after flare,
you keep the sky alive —
lighting the way
for men who trust you
more than they trust the moon.
And when the last illum burns out
and the stars return,
you feel it —
that quiet pride
of knowing you were their eyes
when they needed them most.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 8:24 AM UTC
By LongJohn
I’ve never been much for churches,
but I’ve said a few prayers
in the rain,
in the dark,
and once or twice
with my face in the mud
wondering what the hell
I’d done with my life.
So, here’s a gunner’s prayer —
plain,
unpolished,
and true.
Keep the lads steady,
the sights clean,
and the Number One calm
when the world starts shaking.
Keep the layer sharp,
the loader quick,
and the signaller awake
even when he swears, he is.
Keep the rounds dry,
the fuses honest,
and the gun behaving herself
long enough to do the job.
And when the smoke settles
and the echoes fade,
keep us humble enough
to remember why we’re here
and who we stand beside.
If there’s mercy to spare,
give it to the young ones —
they’ve got more to lose
and less to hide behind.
As for the rest of us,
we’ll take whatever comes
with the same stubborn pride
that’s carried the regiment
from the first gun fired
to the last.
Amen,
or whatever word
a gunner uses
when he means it.
Feb 8
Feb 8, 2026 at 7:50 AM UTC