On January 2, 1980, my navy ship (aircraft carrier USS Nimitz) left Naples, Italy and instead of returning home from a six-month Mediterranean Sea deployment we were sent around Africa (Suez Canal was still closed). The circumnavigation of the continent took 13 days, so no jet lag, but the amount of daylight increased the further south we went. I liked looking at the different sky at night. We were in a hurry to get to the Gulf of Oman Naval Zone of Operation (GONZO station) so no flight operations. Going up and walking the flight deck in the middle of the night, the ship travelling at 29 knots and looking up at the Magellanic Clouds and the Southern Cross. In mid-May we started the return trip to around Africa to return to Virginia, that took another 17 days. But still no flight operations during the transit, so I got to see the nighttime Southern Hemisphere sky, but in their late Autumn, instead of their early Summer.