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Soldiering The Green Machine

A VIETNAM WAR STORY Mother Nature vs the Infantry Soldier in Vietnam by pdoggbiker

In my last post, I focused more on the first day a Cherry spent in the jungle.  He discovered how difficult it was to search for the enemy through the thick, impenetrable jungle while carrying sixty-five pounds of supplies on his back.  The temperature and humidity were both near one-hundred and it felt like walking through the largest sauna in the world.  His first night was like a terrible nightmare; the pitch blackness limiting visibility to only a foot.

His bed was the jungle floor; sharp twigs, roots and stones jabbed at him all through the night, jarring him awake each time he shifted around or turned over.  He was so tired, but would not sleep on this first night.  He knew the enemy was out there somewhere looking for him, and every shadow – be it leaves and branches moving during a short breeze or the moonlight filtering through the canopy and dancing across the vegetation.  All this told his brain that something  is out there.  He’s paralyzed, frozen in place with fear, too afraid to even close his eyes.  He prayed for daylight, which was still hours away.  It was, by far, the most terrifying night of his entire life.

Today, I want to write more about another fear these young men had to endure while living in the jungles.  Mother Nature had created many wonderful things over time; some were beautiful and others were downright frightening.  The jungles of Vietnam were home to every creature, beast, and insect known to man.  Some veterans attest to seeing tigers and elephants in the boonies, but I can’t say that I saw neither.  However, I had seen many wild boars, cobras, small and deadly viper snakes, different spiders and a few boa constrictors.  Someone once said that Vietnam was home to 100 different species of snakes – 98 were poisonous and the other 2 could crush a person to death.

Tarantulas (and other species / sizes of spiders – some the size of dinner plates), red ants, and black horseflies all hurt like hell when they bit.  Bees, redant1wasps, hornets, centipedes, millipedes, lizards, frogs, rats, scorpions, land and water leeches, orangutans, spider monkeys, bats, and hordes of mosquitoes attacked us whenever we entered their domain.  The liquid bug juice supplied by the military kept many of the flying insects from landing on bare skin, but did nothing to prevent those long-beaked malaria-carrying insects from biting you through clothes.  I’d try to cover my head at night with a poncho liner to keep the mosquitoes away, but it was hot and uncomfortable and there was no escaping the constant buzzing in your ears as the blood-thirsty swarms hovered above my head, awaiting patiently for an opportunity to taste the sweet nectar.

11Another heart stopper is when you felt something moving across your body during the night –  there were no lights to turn on or flashlights available to investigate – besides, any light in the dark jungle would be a beacon to those who want to kill me.  You took your chances and either swatted, brushed, jumped up from the ground, or just left it alone.  Some of these creatures had claws 12that gripped you; swatting at them usually pissed them off and resulted in a retaliatory bite, sting, or pinch.  Most of the above were venomous and could make one very sick or even kill.

12Someone once said that what you can’t see won’t hurt you.  That might work for your peace of mind during the night, but let me tell you, these creatures were always found in the damnedest of places first thing in the morning.  You could find them in your pockets, boots, helmet, rucksack, canteen cup, or laying with you under the warmth of your lightweight poncho liner blanket.  A search and destroy effort was usually the first thing on the agenda every morning.

We had no choice but to endure! How would you have fared?


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_______________________________________________________I stole this from the Great Blog Vietnam Cherry which is worth your timr if this is your area of interest! Grumpy

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The US Army & Me

 Image result for US Army
  Now I am going to say right up front that I was nothing Special when it came to Soldiering. Period.
  If you were to open up my old duffel bag and dare look inside. You would find my neatly & folded away Old B.D.U.’s*.
  Upon which you will never find a Ranger Patch or a Special Forces let alone a Delta Team insignia.
Image result for US Army
  Nor did I hold an Officers Commission. (I seriously did look into it when I was in the National Guard.)
  But the all of the Officers that I trusted & when asked about it. All of them said that it is just not worth it. (Even the West Pointer said so.)
  In that its is basically just another full time job on top of your real job.
Also more than once. I had seen a Good Officer get his ass handed to him. In front of the troops no less for no real good reason at all.How many years are usually needed for a young 2nd lieutenant rank to become  a captain in your country? - Quora
  The other reason why I did not go that route. Was that I was just beginning my Teaching Career. If there any other Teachers out there, I think that you would agree, When you start out at first. Related image
  There is never enough time under the Sun to get everything done on time.
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  That and trying to start up a family at the same time. So in truth I just did not want to pay the price for the Brass.
  Bottom line –  I was just your Basic Line Animal.
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  Now for the good news!
Image result for US Army
  Going into the Army was one of the smartest things that I ever did on my own!
 In that it gave me a lot more good useful stuff than I ever gave it.
In that
1. It knocked a lot of shit out of my mind. I also learned a lot about duty & responsibility.
2. I got to see how the world really works. Not the way I thought it should.
3. I got to meet some folks that I would never have meet otherwise
4. I learned to get more stuff done than I ever thought possible in a shorter time than I thought possible
5. I learned to get my shit together and hold it together
6. The Army I saw in the Movies & TV is not the REAL ARMY
7. I got to work with a lot of really great folks*** & some not so great folks
8. I got into the best shape that I ever was in.
    (I lost 50 pounds in Basic. Pity that it came back and then some later on. But that is all my fault)
8 a. I also learned the true meaning of being tired and sore from muscles I  did not know that I even had.
9. When I went to Graduate School. I found it a hell of easier than my classmates. Who almost all of them said it was “hard”. Yeah right.
10. I learned how to take orders and how to intelligently follow thru on them.
I also learned how to give orders and make sure that they got done.
(Never trust any one and always always check up on stuff)
11. When I took the Exam to be considered for a Teaching job. You get  ten extra points for being a Vet. This is basically true for almost any civil servant job by the way.
  The other thing that the Army gave me was some bitter pride, some hard earned confidence** and some pretty useful leadership tricks. That amazingly worked pretty well if I say so in my classroom.
  Bottom line – I can say it was a good experience. Is it for everyone/ HELL NO!
There are a lot of folks that should stay the hell out of my Army.
  Yes its my Army but I let the President play with it.
As my Wise Old Dad told me one.
  “You put a good man in the Army. He will come out a little better man.  But you put a fuck up into the Army. You will get a bigger Fuck up when it comes out. If it comes out alive.”
Related image
*Battle Dress Uniform. It was the field Uniform or work Uniform of the Army during basically the 1980’s. It was alright in its way. But the first models were made of 50% cotton and 50% nylon.  As you can guess it could make a Trooper mighty hot.
  If I could get away with it. I would wear the Old Jungle fatigues of the Vietnam Era Army. Until it was declared illegal to wear. It was a great outfit but that’s the way it is.
** My Senior Drill told us that if you make it thru the Basic. You will never have to prove yourself to anyone ever again. But you gotta get thru me first.
*** Some of the Non Commission & a few officers had this gift of having everything right at their finger tips. “You what? Okay here you go.” It was both very impressive and slightly scary to watch these folks in action.
  It was from them that I learned the highest compliment in the Army. “Yeah he can be an asshole but he really has his shit together!”
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