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"If I can help people feel better, I feel I've done my job," she said. "All these people are so far from home." Her two children thought it was "pretty cool" she was out searching for pirates, she said. The sailors have many rituals aboard the Carlskrona to break up the monotonous days and months. Among them: the captain gets the honor of eating the first flying fish that lands on deck. There are also fraternity-like raids to steal the mascots of rival ships
-- the current captive is a toy beaver -- as well as the tradition of dressing up as King Neptune to celebrate the crossing of the equator. The Carlskrona was deployed a month ago, and will be part of the EU flotilla until November. The galley crew does its best to overcome nostalgia for home-cooked meals by preparing salmon, beef or ostrich steaks, sometimes producing a surprise formal dinner in the middle of the night for the late watch. Bakers make at least four different types of fresh bread every day, using syrups, nuts and whole grains. Cooks also prepare sweets for the crew
-- one day it was small chocolate balls covered in sprinkles, served on what is known as the "Seal Deck" because of the number of sailors sunbathing after lunch. In the evenings, off-duty sailors can unwind with a movie. One of the choices was "Pirates of the Caribbean." Sailor Christoffer Nilsson-Mineur was asked if he felt any affinity with Johnny Depp's eyeliner-sporting, swashbuckling hero. "Not really," Nilsson-Mineur said thoughtfully. "I guess we're more like the cool English guy who hunts him."
[Associated
Press;
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