Animals that live, eat, sleep and crap in small enclosure? Yep… submariners đ
HMS Artful is the second Astute-class submarine to be commissioned into Royal Navy service. Together with HMS Astute, lead boat of the class, she joins the RN’s five Trafalgar class submarines as part of the SSN fleet.
Artful goes nuts over submarineâs new mascot
The crew of Britainâs newest nuclear submarine â officially named today in Barrow today â unveiled the boatâs namesake mascot ahead of the milestone ceremony in the boatâs life.
Artful, a ten-month-old lemur monkey from South Lakes Wild Animal Park, has been adopted by the crew of the ÂŁ1bn hunter-killer.
You can never have too many pictures of lemur monkeys holding the crest of the ÂŁ1bn nuclear submarine for which they are namedâŚ
You can never have too many pictures of lemur monkeys holding the crest of the ÂŁ1bn nuclear submarine for which they are namedâŚ
This is Artful the Monkey, official mascot of Artful the Submarine, which will be unveiled in a formal ceremony in Barrow tomorrow as the hunter-killer â the third of Britainâs seven Astute-class boats â nears completion.
Ahead of the big day in the boatâs life, a nine-strong team from Artful made the short trip to South Lakes Wild Animal Park to adopt the ten-month-old baby ring-tailed lemur.
The inspiration for the adoption came from the submarineâs crest â although the creature on the boatâs historic symbol, chosen in 1945 by the Admiraltyâs advisor on heraldry for the first Artful, is actually an unspecified species of primate.
âHaving walked around the wildlife park with my wife last year, I remembered they had little monkeys and thought that adopting one as a mascot would be a good idea,â said 24-year-old Lt Aaron Williams from Bradford.
âWe wanted to do something quirky to mark the naming ceremony.
âWhen I did a little research into the crest, I found out that it was chosen to represent the quality of artfulness, monkeys having the reputation of being clever and resourceful creatures.â
Sadly they had to let them out eventually… Some of the Artfuls in the spider monkey enclosure they spruced up
Meanwhile in the wildlife parkâs spider monkey enclosure⌠Knot and rope skills were put to good use as the submariners spruced things up for its inhabitants.
âI love monkeys, but letâs hope they donât complain about my decorating skills as much as my wife does!â said 33-year-old PO Lee Sinclair from Aberdeen.
As for Artful, well sadly the new mascot will be going nowhere near his boat (monkey + ÂŁ1bn submarine, what could possibly go wrong?). Animals have been banned from Her Majestyâs ships since the 1970s for reasons of hygiene.
Which is a shame because the RN had a long and unusual history of mascots from the animal kingdom, from Simon the Cat which kept the vermin at bay on HMS Amethyst on the Yangtze; to Barbara the polar bear, rescued as a cub from drifting ice off Greenland and a shipâs mascot until growing too large and re-homed in Portsmouth; and Winnie, another monkey mascot who travelled with Great War torpedo boat HMS Velox.
âWe wonât be able to get Artful on board, but the crew will still take an interest in him and no doubt a few of the guys and their families will be visiting the wildlife park in the future to see how he is doing,â said Lt Williams.
As for the submarine, sheâs been eight and half years in the making. The naming ceremony today is roughly the equivalent of launching a surface ship (thereâs no slipway for submarines, which are inched out of the gigantic Devonshire Dock Hall at BAEâs Barrow yard), including smashing a bottle of champers against the hull in the age-old style.
Building on the extensive trials and tests of her older sisters Astute and Ambush, both of which are due to carry out their first operational patrols in a matter of months, Artful is due to enter service in 2015.
The only previous Artful, sister of HMS Alliance on display in Gosport at the RN Submarine Museum, served for over two decades from the late 1940s until the end of the 1960s, before being broken up.