Been there - done that!
Friday morning kit layouts were a royal PITA'!
Our Corps School (Vimy Barracks, Kingston) was so hot and humid during the summer that polished brass would tarnish overnight. You slept on the cool tile floor as it was next to impossible to sleep on a bed.
Been there - done that!
Friday morning kit layouts were a royal PITA'!
Our Corps School (Vimy Barracks, Kingston) was so hot and humid during the summer that polished brass would tarnish overnight. You slept on the cool tile floor as it was next to impossible to sleep on a bed.
Ready for inspection sargeant....and my weekend pass.
Once you got that rack properly squared away with cardboard,etc. you only slept in it on the weekends to save time and distress with morning inspections. I remember the NCOs using yellow tape to mark where the blanket folds were supposed to be. Minor adjustments were possibel by moving the tape.![]()
Stuff like that, precluded me ever serving in the Military, though I did manage a few months in the reserves.Grizz
Ya, I heard the same thing so joined the Airforce instead when I found out they issued you a Holiday Inn guide and a credit card.![]()
Old photo of my dad's rifle team I found folded up with his service papers. Not sure where the pic was taken, he enlisted at CFB Shilo, and served with RCEME 1952-1964, mostly in Calgary.
![]()
more to do with preserving the layout and hospital corners rather than excessive heat.........
Old photo of my dad's rifle team I found folded up with his service papers. Not sure where the pic was taken, he enlisted at CFB Shilo, and served with RCEME 1952-1964, mostly in Calgary.
![]()
Stuff like that, precluded me ever serving in the Military, though I did manage a few months in the reserves.
Grizz
That’s going to be an expensive repair!RAF CH-47 Chinook after striking a power line on Tuesday past.
![]()
![]()
That’s going to be an expensive repair!
All are wearing Bush uniforms, Bush caps , and 2 officers with forage caps and from what I can make out , puttees with ankle weights , when I joined in 1971 , I was issued Bush trousers , Jacket and cap,I’m not sure why I was kitted out with this uniform, as we never wore it , we all wore Combats for field and battle dress for parade , some very experienced soldiers with the No.4 rifles in this photo
I don't think that chicken $hit hurt me too much at all. I made sure that I never inflicted it on anybody else though.![]()
The military nomenclature for the 'Bush Cap' was CSFOD - Cap, summer, field, olive drab.
Yeah, the good ol' days of weights, boots and puttees! In PPCLI Depot we wore our Bush Jackets starched and pressed. You had to force your fingers through the sleeves to put it on. However, in the heat of Wainwright, you were wet under arms and the waist by 10:00 am, but you sure looked sharp for the first few hours.