Another chat with my colleague and some more anecdotes. Leslie and his new wife holidayed on the Black Sea about 15 years ago. He had just had a hip operation and consequently set off the metal detectors. He and his wife were taken into the inspection room where a male and a female officer were waiting. Dropping his daks, Leslie showed them the scars from the operation which coincided with the beeps of the scanner...and then the various bullet/shrapnel scars which also beeped. He was chuckling as he got dressed and the female officer asked why as most people found the experience humbling. Said Leslie, "The last time I dropped my pants for a pretty lady was during the war"! Apparently, Leslie's second wife rolled her eyes and said, "Oh dear, he's off again".
Turns out my colleague's step-father, Harry Loads, was a fitter on Mossies in North Africa and India - supervised a team that specialised in gluing them back together in the hot conditions! This came about while discussing the Aussie Beaufort problem with the trim tabs on the elevator and how technology could become quite localised and suited to a particular environment. Incidentally, Beauforts were built not far from where I now sit. Of course, you know what that means...Beaufighters were too!
Both my colleague's father figures were of UK extraction, not Australian.