EDD Memorial 08 10 15

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Today we remember and pay tribute to Sapper Darren Smith and his Explosive Detection Dog, Herbie. They were both killed in Afghanistan in 2010 along with Sapper Jacob Moreland.
Darren Smith was born in Adelaide in November 1984 and was the oldest of three children. Darren excelled in sport and music: he enjoyed soccer, cricket, and Aussie Rules football at school, and played guitar in the Wirreanda High School band. To his family, Darren was always active and fun-loving, sometimes cheeky, but always well-mannered. A loving son, he was also a devoted big brother to his sisters Chavuanne and Crystal.
Darren always had an ambition to be a soldier. In 2001 he enlisted in the Army Reserve and underwent basic training at Kapooka. Following this, Darren was posted to 3rd Field Squadron, Royal Australian Engineers, at Warradale in South Australia, where he went on to complete his training as a combat engineer – a specialist in bridge-building, minefield clearance, and demolition, amongst other things. In 2004, Darren transferred to the Regular Army and was posted to the 1st Combat Engineer Regiment in Darwin. While there, he met Angela – the love of his life. They married and had a son, Mason.
Darren transferred to the 2nd Combat Engineer Regiment in Brisbane, where he developed a passion for working with Explosive Detection Dogs. These dogs are trained to locate improvised explosive devices and weapons caches. They and their handlers tend to form a strong bond – described as both a partnership and mateship. As well as their work in the field, the effect of the dogs on morale cannot be overestimated. Many soldiers say that the dogs also serve to remind them of home.
Darren was paired with Herbie, a two-year-old black-and-tan collie cross. Herbie was originally recruited from the Peninsula Animal Aid Facility, an animal rescue shelter at Redcliffe in Queensland. With the possibility of a deployment to Afghanistan approaching, Darren and Herbie trained for six months so they could serve side-by-side on deployment.
Darren’s bond with Herbie was so strong that when Herbie suffered an injury that threatened to prevent him accompanying Darren to Afghanistan, Darren worked with him in rehabilitation every day for six weeks until Herbie was declared fit to deploy.
Darren and Herbie travelled to Afghanistan with Mentoring Task Force 1 in March 2010. Here they conducted foot patrols out of Patrol Base Wali with Mentoring Team Alpha as part of a broader strategy to deny the Taliban access to the Mirabad Valley. Combat engineers such as Darren and Herbie regularly accompanied the infantry on their daily patrols, sweeping ahead to counter the threat of IEDs.
On the morning of 7 June 2010 the team conducted a routine foot patrol with the intention of disrupting the Taliban laying IEDs in and around the village of Sorkh Lez in the Mirabed Valley. Herbie, Darren, and Sapper Jacob Moreland were investigating metal signature on the footpad of a creek bed when an IED was triggered. The blast killed Herbie, and mortally wounded both Darren and Jacob. According to those who were with him in his final moments, Darren’s final words were for his family, Angela and Mason.
He was 25 years old when he died.
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How many IED detection team members received gallantry decorations?

jameswhyard