The Crete Battle finished at the end of May and Vic and a small contingent of Allies escaped to Tymbakion on the south side. Here the men were captured by a German patrol and marched back over the mountains to the northern side. During the march that lasted three days the prisoners were refused water and food. By the time they reached Retimo they were in a poor state. After retiring for the night Vic was bitten by a poisonous snake and close to death. He was saved by a German doctor and he eventually recovered.
Vic began writing a diary to record his life as a POW. He found whatever pieces of paper he could and wrote daily notes on these about what was happening to himself and those around him. His general knowledge came to the fore when he wrote a daily note called "Oil" about happenings in the other areas of the War. The Oil news came from the view points of the Germans and the Allies. He kept this up over four and a half years. During these years he produced 1440 notes and hid these on his person and in his knapsack.
The 151 POWs sent to Tymbakion, Crete, began working for the Germans grubbing out thousands of olive trees. The men were told the cleared area was in preparation for grape growing. Like most of the German propaganda it was found to be false and the real reason soon surfaced. From grubbing olive trees to building an aerodrome, Vic was soon predicting what was happening to him and the other prisoners.
At the end of 1941 Vic and the other POWs were dispatched by trucks to Heraklion. A scary ship voyage took the group to the hellhole of Solonika. During the movement across the Mediterranean Sea to Greece their ship was shadowed by a British submarine and fired upon. Luckily the torpedo just missed leaving the men shaken and pleased to reach land safe. The stay at Solonika was short but unpleasant. From Salonika they were loaded into cattle cars under brutal conditions and taken by train into the centre of Germany to a prison camp called Stalag VIIIB. One of the main issues the men had trouble coping with was the drop in temperature, with many days below zero.
Vic was allocated a work party where he helped maintain the railway lines at Bodisch and Konigshan. He stayed alert to all the activities he was involved in and looked after his mates. He was considered by his other members of the Work Party to be the Man of Confidence and therefore was looked up to. He had fingers in many pies even writing letters home to the spouses of inmates.
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