From
the Soldier side: Sometimes looking back on my National Guard days, I often
asked myself: “Why did you stay in?” Remember I had been in the Regular Army in
the old Berlin Brigade. In Berlin, we were spit shined all the time. We had
highly polished boots, sharp creases in our uniforms and enough starch to stop
a bullet. (well not really)
But,
the National Guard in 1989 was nothing like that. We had some guys whose only
job was the “One weekend a month” when they came to drills. It was easy to see
why many of them couldn’t hold a regular job the rest of the month- they were
too messed up. Many were drunks, lazy, slobs, or just dumb. Some were all of
the above.
…All
except the platoon I was in. Somehow I ended up in the best platoon. (Well, we
had a few heavy drinkers, but they were “functioning alcoholics”.) It was good
to be on a good platoon, but guess who they called on when they needed
something done and done right? Our platoon.
Did
I mention we had some heavy drinkers? We
did. I think the worst were the
cooks. Now for those who’ve never been
in the military, you may not know that they actually send people to school to
learn how to cook for other people. But,
in our case, I suspect most of our company cooks fell asleep in cook
school.
The
first time I went out into the “field” (that’s where we’d camp out in the woods
for the weekend) I found how bad our cooks were. Now write this down: “50% of doing any job
well is just showing up!” Well, most of
the times our cooks were too drunk to wake up the next morning or they forgot
to come to drill one weekend a month.
…so
there we were, bivouacked (military term for camping) in some woods near our
armory. We had been running around all
Saturday digging holes and stuff. When
it came to dinner time, we were told that there was a problem, so we’d be
eating MREs. The next morning for
breakfast, we were expecting eggs, coffee and stuff…and we were told that there
was a problem. So my platoon sergeant
called me over to the hood of his Jeep.
He opened up his ruck sack and took out a camp stove, instant coffee and
a box of Pop Tarts. He said: “It’s
another Pop Tart Breakfast.”
I
learned that day to NEVER count on anybody to take care of my men or me. It’s happened in the Army and in Police work
many times. Our cooks were drunks and
when they finally woke up, I suggested that we tie them to the Jeep and drag
them around in the woods.
6 comments:
Back in the 80's I went back into the Navy for a short time (had to get out of the reserve due to job promotion that kept me on the road, thus unable to attend drills) and part of my weekend drill was to attend an hour class in my rate (computer programming). One weekend I went to the class and waited for an hour. No one showed up. I went back to my station and my LT wanted to know why I wasn't in class. When i told him, he turned around and wrote up the dude and sent him to Capt. Mass. Minor Court-martial. The cooks needed the same shit or worse. Lax discipline will get you killed or unfed.
ONE advantage of Navy drill, they actually would get underway for the weekend, so the cooks had NO choice but to cook, if they wanted to walk off the ship on Sunday afternoon, and not 'accidentally' fall over the side underway...
CI Roller, I regret to inform you I have bestowed upon you the covetous Liebster Award at the Camp of the Praetorians http://castrapraetoria1.blogspot.com/2012/02/liebster-award.html
Tag, you're it!
CP, one of the reasons it took me so long to get my "20 years" was I had to keep taking breaks in service.
Old NFO, we came up with a song, I can't recall the tune, but something like: "Kill the cooks, kill the cooks,"
Top, I hate shit like that.
Missed the bus, for being first anyway, but I'll do it anyway.
Here's your Liebster Award.
http://onemp.blogspot.com/2012/02/you-like-me-you-really-like-me.html
Boom, goes the dynamite!
In our bridge company, the cooks lived in our barracks, or tents in the field. They fucked with our food, we fucked them up. We ate well.
Some of the worse food I ate was in the consolidated mess halls. Hated being in transit.
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