Actually Gardening missions had some of the highest casualty rates of all night missions. Flying close to shore at 180mph at 1500 feet in a straight line often very close to Flak ships to drop Parachute mines was no picnic. Particulary when the dropping run needs to be down the swept channel and who would know better where the swept channel was than the people who swept it.
And yet if you look at Bomber Command's war diaries, usually under 'minor operations' on any particular night, you will see a list of the aircraft which carried out such missions and very often the succinct final phrase, 'no losses' or 'no aircraft lost'.
It's worth remembering that the venerable old Wellingtons and Stirlings were often employed on such operations. From early 1943 the height from which mines were dropped was raised to 3,000ft and later the same year to 12,000ft which took the earlier risk of flying at 600-800ft out of the equation.
It became standard practice by 1944 to drop mines from 15,000ft 'blind' using H2S.
I would have to dig for percentage losses on such operations, but I guarantee that they would be significantly lower than those incurred on missions to Germany, hence my original statement.
Edit: From Feb '42 to May '45 Bomber Command flew 16,240 mine laying sorties.
From April '40 to May '45 467 aircraft were lost on such missions.
If anyone knows how many missions were flown in 1940/41 we can work out a percentage loss. I have the data but can't be arsed to add it up. It's going to be around 2% anyway.
Cheers
Steve
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