Good turn out again at the Cenotaph today, with what seemed to be most of those serving in MOD Main Builidng out in the sunshine in uniform with the populace for the ceremony, with the final 3 surviving WW1 veterans living in the UK rightly taking centre stage. Henry Allingham, the oldest, was determined to try and stand but was not able to do so, and Harry Patch, the only "Tommy" left who actually served in the trenches of Passchendaele, was accompanied by Jonathan Beharry VC (gained in Iraq) which was a moving sight.
For our part in the light blue, the meeting that I was in today started at 1100 on the dot by observing the two minute silence, before moving through updates on current happenings in fields afar, to the future size, shape and nature of what we might become under a grateful Government's "Public Value Programme" (aka further big efficiency savings = big cuts on the way). Something of a counterpoint to the day and rather ironic.
The 65th anniversary of D-Day in northern France should be good next year and, if you can't get out there as TOATB suggests, then take the Pompey Caen night crossing and wake up to the view that they saw as they approached the shore. Failing that, here's the iconic footage of the ramp going down and disembarking
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=k3azRAPPlbs&feature=related MG Mark