Sadly Graem ( Giff ) McGifford passed away on the 5th of June in his home in Steibis, Bavaria. Giff was the Chief Instructor at the Ski / Adventure Training hut in Steibis before leaving the Green Jackets to work and live in Steibis. In recent years Giff had suffered ill-health due to two serious accidents and a number of operations. Giff was a big hearted guy and a true Green Jacket in every sense, he will be missed by his family and friends alike. RIP mate.
To all that new Giff and to those that never had the pleasure of his company this has come to me as a very sad and unexpected announcement.
It is true to say that Giff was a lovable big guy in so many ways. His size, his humour, his wit, his irrepressible character not forgetting the serious amount of beer he could pack away in any one single NAAFI session and then go back for the NAAFI night shift.
I first Met Giff at Rolston Camp in January 1979 when I was the latest NIG to join 9 Plt, C (Mushroom) Coy. He along with others chipped in with the usual NIG baiting that goes on. But more importantly he was the first guy in the Plt to make me laugh and the first to make me feel at home. He was also first guy show me how to open a beer bottle with an SLR mag. His charge for this invaluable technique - He drank my beer that he had just opened for me.
Giff and I shared five years together, 3 years in 9 Plt followed by 2 years in the Mortar Plt. The Mortars being a very specialised drinking club, you could only get Indirect Fire Support when portable kidney dialysis was available.
I cannot begin to consolidate the highs and lows we shared, but we had some great times and its always the good times that were usually followed by temporary amnesia about the night before, followed by extreme nausea lasting well past NAAFI break.
Some Highs & Lows
1. Meeting Giff's Dad for the first time - Giff, me and Mick Keating decide to lodge at Giff's house for the weekend. We arrive mid afternoon and drop the bags off with his mum. We immediately assault the Queens Head in Borehamwood. Having fully charged our mags and primed our grenades we attempt the jolly jape home. A few metres from our final objective Mick gives me a crushing rugby tackle straight through a perfectly manicured privet hegde leaving a 2 man mouse-hole in it. While rolling around on a front lawn the property owner appears at his front door. Giff took immediate control of the situation. I remember him saying "Hello Dad, this is Mick, this is Mac and Er uh-mm, this is a hole in your hedge".
2. Trusting Giff with the choggie run - Situation, day 3 on the beach in Nice. Me, Mick and Giff bumming it with an international collective of other bums and backpackers. We scrape together our last 30 or 40 francs (£3/4). We promote Giff to CQMS and his mission is to get as much hooch as possible with the foreign toilet tissue. He scuttled away into the dimming light of dusk. He returns before dark carrying two plain white carrier bags with the reassuring "chink chink" sound of glass on glass and a half eaten baguette in his Gob. Giff is exceptionally pleased with his purchase. In one bag several baguettes and in the other, the wholly grail, 6 bottles of wine. He then produces change? How could this be? He was truly the Messiah, feeding the 5,000. We cracked open the first bottle while Giff explained that they were only 2 francs each (20p). Yes, Giff had bought 6 litres of cooking wine. It tasted more like malt vinegar. Just the accompaniment for the stale baguettes. It was that grim not even the Aussie backpackers would drink it! So we did.
3. Giff, the true Romantic - Location, R & R in BC, Canada, Giff and I plus a few attachments had an entertaining afternoon getting ripped off in a pool room by the local hustlers. Giff not being a real player of the game applied his attention to the bar. Before having to leave our underpants as a deposit we decided to leave. We asked the taxi driver to drop us off where the bar was open the latest. Inside the club we got separated for a while. At closing time I found Giff on his knees proposing to a young women, and I could appreciate her charms, that was until a local confided in me that she was in fact a he, from the stage show that played earlier that evening! Should have gone to Specsavers, me and Giff both.
Did I say highs and Lows, with Giff you were always on the upward curve. I last saw Giff in the late summer of 1985, he was on admin run from Stiebis prior to going on leave. He popped in to Ops Training to give me his usual, less than polite greeting that he saved for me. He said next time in he would bank a day extra off for a beer together.
Time and tide moved on, we never had that last beer. But you know, we did a shed load with out it. God bless you Giff.
To his Family and close friends I send my heartfelt condolences.
Much Saddened by the unexpected news. Was informed by 'Chips' Pomfrett on Friday.
Spent many an interesting and fun time with Giff. First met him, alongside Si Kirby, Punky Holtham, Andy Lee and many others, when we rocked up at the Rifle Depot to begin our boy service/JR Company training in June '77. As i was a bit older, i passed out of Trg Coy 6 weeks before him but both Giff and Si ended up with me in 9 Pl C Coy.
It was a great Pl to be in with many good friends made. We had a great set of Jnco's, brilliant Pl Sgts, several great PL Comds, OC's and equally good CSM's. Most of us felt lucky to be in C Company.
We all enjoyed the delights of Tidworth, many exercises both in the UK and abroad, and our tours over the water. * 'Bullet', I remember you joining the platoon during NI Training and that stupid ring you wore on your wedding finger 'to keep the girls away' and also meeting you at the gate in Dungannon where you had flown in on your 18th birthday* Also remember having a few beers with both Giff and Ivor Lane in 'Boredom wood'. You were probabaly there showing us how to drink. I know that we'd also often all meet up in the 'Sundowner'? while on leave.
I think that it was on a 'Snow Queen' in early '81, where Giff was first asked to become an instructor along with Mick Keating.....even though i was the fastest tw*t through the gates and down the slope and still in one piece!...guess speed was more important to me than technique.
I pretty much lost touch with Giff once he got posted to the Ski hut, but still met up for the occasional beer where he took great delight in telling me that he hadn't worn a uniform for ages....can't remember the exact figure but i think it was something like 8 years?
I will say that to me, Giff was a quiet, inoffensive and decent bloke who i don't recall having a nasty or gobby side to him ...unlike most of us, me included.
He had a kind nature and was more than willing to help you out whenever asked. I still carry the 2 inch scar, which was the width of the blade - that needed 11 stiches! - in the palm of my hand, after trying to take a knife off him during some 'unoffical' unarmed combat training, he was totally innocent and just holding the thing when i pounced...the Bowie knife almost went right through my hand, the blood splurted out and hit the ceiling!....he then sprang into action, got me to clench my fist around a cork and and then wrapped a FFD around it until we got to the med centre where Bob Feild stiched my palm up.
During the next few days he managed to accidently injure another 2 or 3 members of the platoon as well! Dave Judge(Pl Sgt) could only shake his head in wonder.
Other memoiries include travelling by greyhound bus from Kentucky to Florida for some R'n'R, after the 6 week exchange with the 101st Airborne.
Strangely, a few of us had only recently got in touch with Giff again via facebook. We last exchanged message only a few weeks back and he sounded absolutely fine with no mention of the injuries or of feeling sorry for himself.
Met Giff on a number of visits to Steibis, had some great times with him on the hills in the Summer followed by greater times in the bar afterwards - RIP mate