Saturday, August 18, 2007
Update from Mississippi and pics
Hello to all,
I am attempting to send an e-mail and some pictures, but the internet is acting a little crazy, so if you receive this e-mail more then once, or not at all, I apologize. For those of you that do not receive it, ask a friend or family member who did receive it if they could send it to you. Things here are going like one would expect, tiring and hot and full of things that make you scratch your head and go..."huh?" We have been doing lots of training since I returned from Texas. Just to give a quick overview
1. CIED 2 and CiED 3, which consisted of five days of learning counter measures to IEDs, implemented explosive devices. There was some classroom time, but a lot of it was practical exercise which consisted of driving around in humvess through urban and rural terrain doing vehicle maneuvers, coming into contact with "IEDs" and reacting appropriately and promptly. We had a night convoy one of the nights, and then one of the days we drove around all day in the humvees doing lanes, but for the morning part of the training we had to drive "tactically" which meant the windows of the humvess were up. The humvees we have to use at Camp Shelby have no air condition, the ones in Iraq do, we drove around in temperatures above 100 degrees with our windows up, all our gear on including gloves! This one made me scratch my head and go...."huh?" These were some long days.
2. The hardest three days we've had since we have been here was squad live fire. We had a mile long course where we had to do squad movements in full battle rattle, so a lot of running, getting up and down from the prone position, and crawling. The lane lasted between 20 and 30 minutes, but I felt like I had put in a full days work after just that short time. We had targets we fired at the whole way through. We did a walk through one day with no rounds, the next day with blanks, the third day we used live rounds. I was assigned to Bravo team and so at one point during the lane we came into contact with a bunker and my team had to run about 200 meters doing a left flanking movement up a hill while Alpha team (consisting of Seth) laid down suppressive fire, and then myself and another Specialist sprinted another 100 meters over the bunker and threw a simulation grenade into the bunker and then cleared it. A medic clearing a bunker? Scratch your head....I did.
3. We did weapons zero and qualification of our M-4s along with NBC qual which is firing with your gas mask on, and we did night qual. Seth and I were both a first time go on all of the qualifications. Seth also qualified on a M-240, which is simply a "big gun."
4. Land Navigation was fun, but the worst part was it started at 3:00am so you were up at 2:00am to get bussed over there. We used the new GPS systems which are fascinating things, and for our practical exercises we were put into the swamps of Camp Shelby and made to find three locations that, when we finally got there, had a sheet of paper with numbers that you had to record to prove you made it there. We traveled in pairs and returned with mud up to our knees. We then had to find locations all around base driving in the humvees with the GPS systems. The technology is pretty amazing.
We've had plenty of other things going on as well, but those are the main things. Tomorrow starts MCP (mounted convoy patrol) which I will be a driver for because we are short drivers and I have a humvee license. We will head out to the FOB (forward operation base) tomorrow to sleep in tents while we do MCP, which will last five days. After that we have our final event which puts everything we've done so far together.
Only a little over two more weeks and I will be enjoying the Gulf of Mexico with my wonderful family for a few days of leave before we ship! I can not wait!
The attitude here has done a complete 180. When we got here everyone was saying "we hope we stay at Camp Shelby as long as possible because it will keep us out of Iraq." Now everyone is saying, "get us the hell out of Camp Shelby and over to Iraq!"
Hope everyone is doing well. Enjoy the pictures! Take care.
Love,
Eli
ps. I saved this e-mail as a draft as I was having problems, and I tried to send it this evening and was unable to send it with the pictures, so I sent a few to Dad and he'll be posting them on the blog, so that's how you can view them.
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