Here we go again

Two Years have past since my Lad came back from Afghanistan. He as now gone back for another six months tour. I will be posting here again!
'Praise be to the LORD my Rock, who trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle.' Read, Listen. (Psalm 144:1)

> TV duties for Guards of honour

TV duties for Guards of honour


The Household Division of the Grenadier Guards protect the Queen and the Crown Jewels.


They are the most recognisable soldiers in the UK, if not the world.

The public face of royal ceremony, resplendent in bearskins and scarlet tunics, they stand guard outside Britain's royal residences, most famously Buckingham Palace. But the Grenadier Guards are also the most senior infantry regiment in the British Army and they are also one of the oldest, celebrating their 350th anniversary last year.

To mark this milestone, Guarding the Queen will provide a rare behind-the-scenes insight into their journey from rookie recruits to carrying out important duties outside Buckingham Palace and on the front line. From last December, cameras followed the Nijmegen Company who form a key part of the Household Division of the Grenadier Guards. Their job at Wellington Barracks in London includes guarding both the Queen, and the Crown Jewels at The Tower of London. It is the first time the Grenadiers have been filmed in 10 years.

In the first of this three part series, the Queen celebrates the 350th anniversary of the Grenadiers with a party at Windsor Castle. For commanding officer Colonel Carew Hatherley it's a very proud moment.

"We're carrying on 350 years of serving the monarchy - that's 10 kings and three queens. It's part of the living history of Great Britain," he says. But not all the guards are enjoying the party. Up in the Scottish highlands, Captain Ollie Doherty is leading a group of trainee guardsmen on their final exercise in battlefield discipline - the climax of months of hard training. Of the 13 Grenadiers who started the course, only four remain. One of the four is Steven Cooper, and the programme cameras follow him on his passing out parade at the guards' training depot in Catterick - and see how he settles into life at Wellington Barracks in London before taking part in his first guard change outside Buckingham Palace.

Regimental Adjutant Conway Seymour, a Grenadier for 42 years, says: "Of all the great heroes, there's none that can compares with the British Grenadiers."

Today, he is inducting two new musicians to the band regiment. The world famous pomp and ceremony of the changing of the guard wouldn't be complete without the Band of the Grenadiers. One of the new recruits is Abbey Davis - only the fifth woman to join the Grenadier Guards band.

After her 12 weeks of basic training she joins Wellington Barracks for her initiation into the band troop: "It's weird being in a proper army camp, all the army vehicles everywhere. I'm not used to seeing them," she says.

Band Sergeant Major Kevin Bird is responsible for getting the band into shape. He says: "I think for any musician who comes into this environment, it's going to be a very big challenge. When they audition, first of all they're expected to be of a certain standard. They will go through basic training and then they come to us so they could be anything from 18 months to two years in training before they come to us."

As new band recruit, Abbey takes part in her first guard change, it is the last for Major Marcus Elliot-Square. He's about to go to Afghanistan and returns to his battalion for four months' training to prepare to fight the Taliban.

The life of the regiment began in the 1650s in Flanders, an area which generations of guardsmen were to come to know. They fought here in 1658 - and again in 1940 - on the road between Furnes and Dunkirk. At Waterloo in 1815, they won their name and not far from here a century later struggled in the mud of the Western Front. On September 20, 1944

tanks of the 2nd Battalion and troops of the 1st Battalion finally crossed the Nijmegen Bridge which, four months earlier, had been the focus of the failed airborne Operation Market Garden and later became the subject of the film A Bridge Too Far.

The 2nd Battalion was placed in "suspended animation" in 1994, but the traditions and the colours of the Battalion are carried by the Nijmegen Company, which carries the name of that battle honour won by the 2nd Battalion in 1944.

For the last 14 months, Major Elliot-Square has commanded Nijmegen Company when the Grenadiers are on guard. After leaving his ceremonial duties he puts his company through live firing exercises in Northumberland on an assault across open ground. The company work alongside Afghans who are drafted in so the troops can get used to working through interpreters.


* Guarding the Queen, Tuesday, 8pm, ITV1.

Last Updated: 12 July 2007 1:32 PM