Taupo teenager tops navy class

Ordinary Diver Dylan Macdonald performs the Royal New Zealand Navy haka with his classmates following his graduation at Devonport Naval Base.

A Taupo teenager has topped his class in the latest batch of sailors to graduate into the Royal New Zealand Navy.

Ordinary Diver Dylan Macdonald, 18, stepped out at Devonport Naval Base on Saturday with 85 other sailors graduating from their 18-week Basic Common Training course.

Chief of Navy Rear Admiral John Martin presented Ordinary Diver Macdonald with the Spencer Tewsley Cup for being the best all-round Basic Common Trainee.

Earlier he had also received the Mariner Skills Excellence Award, for the highest marks in his class for mariner skills.

He was already feeling nervous about his graduation parade, in front of family and an audience of 700 people, but he said his top-of-the-class award 'was out of the blue”.

Ordinary Diver Macdonald, who moved to Taupo with his family from South Africa nine years ago, was Deputy Head Boy at Tauhara College, as well as captain of the school's First XV and First XI. He was inspired to join the RNZN in Year 9, when a recruiting bus came to the college.

He says it was a proud moment to reach the end of the course and graduate.

'They break you down and take you to some tough places in yourself, then build you back up. It's awesome. We love a challenge – it's what we signed up for.”

Ordinary Diver Dylan Macdonald receives the Spencer Tewsley Cup from Chief of Navy Rear Admiral John Martin during graduation.

He liked the RNZN because he related well to team environments and the organisation was full of passionate people of all kinds, he said.

'The Navy has lots of effective people with different personalities, different backgrounds, getting through tasks as quickly as possible.”

The hardest part of the course was the mental challenges, he says.

'You have to find a way to push through mentally, as well as helping your classmates who need support while you are struggling as well.

'You need to be precise with everything you do, in order to save time and keep track of everything. I'm a bit too particular in trying to do things perfectly, so it was learning to find a balance.”

Ordinary Diver Macdonald's parents, Malcolm and Caron, are justifiably proud of their son.

'He was straight out of school and we thought his choice was fantastic. We supported him 100 per cent,” Caron says.

He was keenly missed during his first five weeks of training, with letter writing the only contact allowed, she says.

'We're a really tight-knit family, and he was a real presence at home. But we knew he was doing the right thing.”

Ordinary Diver Dylan Macdonald holds up the netting on the RNZN's confidence course to get his teammates through.

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