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If and when you go to the field, what's in your loadout?
Posted 11 y ago
Responses: 8
Lots of Ziplock bags! My morale went up when I put on clean, dry socks! A small pillow, SNACKS, whatever the current means of playing music (ever try carrying a 8-track player to the field?), and a map & compass. I do not like feeling lost, being wet, or hungry!
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Long ago... on a mountain far away.
Bag of Oranges. I always went to the commissary and bought a bag of oranges before going to the field. They're like little balls of liquid sunshine. Quick bursts of energy on a hike, and you can shove them in an asspack or a pack or wherever.
Bag of Oranges. I always went to the commissary and bought a bag of oranges before going to the field. They're like little balls of liquid sunshine. Quick bursts of energy on a hike, and you can shove them in an asspack or a pack or wherever.
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CPT Chris Loomis
I can't be trusted to ruck a bag of oranges. I'd smash the heck outta them. Either my pockets or my ruck would look like I lost a fight with an Orange Julious drink.... Just sayin.....
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I like to put everything in zip lock bags. That is a rule for me. I like my socks, shirts and underwear to be all in one zip lock bag so its like a kit. I will also bring my sand table kit, notepad, pens, pencils, extra batteries, and of course snacks.
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CPT Chris Loomis
I do the same thing with zip lock bags. EVERYTHING goes into zip lock bags. And then redundantly that all goes into a dry bag.
I also "ranger roll" all my skivvies, tshirts, and socks together as a unit.
I also "ranger roll" all my skivvies, tshirts, and socks together as a unit.
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Being a squid, I was expectantly "intimidated" the first time I left the wire as the only sailor in company with infantry. I chose to go "light" but figured the critical elements were staying dry, warm and having a back-up plan. I kept a dry set of DCUs and undergarments in a dry-lock bag with the air squeezed out. Three pair socks in a smaller dry-lock. I private purchased a light-weight medium Z-bag which fit well on the understraps of my three-day pack. I took the contents of several MREs, removed them from the primary container and chose only the highest calorie portions to save space. Water. Lighter. I had a light weight, packable parka that could be worn under my DCUs and armor and a "beanie" for colder nights. "Survival" blanket. E&E bag that fit in my cargo pocket. Spare batts for my light, CQB scope and NVGs. Paracord. Light sticks, Light-weight poncho. Practical fixed blade knife. Needle/thread. I pint plastic bottle of kerosense. Five pipe cleaners and a collapsible toothbrush. In my load bearing vest, six mags 5.56, two mags 9mm, personal first aid, tactical flashlight, two zip ties, compass, small set of binos. From an Aviator friend, I obtained a small signal beacon that had a hood to select visible strobe, or IR only.
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My single burner propane camp stove, a variety of spices to fix the MRE's and t-rats, my CBRN box always comes, so I can practice notional CBRN attacks, and at least 2 books. As O/C support, not much in the way of TA-50 other then ACH and LBV and eyepro/gloves
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1SG (Join to see)
Sir,
I mostly make stuff up as I go. I need to think on it.
Spices: I bring a multi spice bottle that you can get from camping sections of stores, typically salt, garlic, onion, paprika, cumin and pepper. I bring a small amount of Italian herbs and lemon pepper. Spike or any of the grill seasoning combos that are out on the shelves work well too.
I am part of a support unit. Most meals are dfac... Even lunch when they need to burn through leftovers. The spices help a lot with the heat in a pouch stuff they feed us
I mostly make stuff up as I go. I need to think on it.
Spices: I bring a multi spice bottle that you can get from camping sections of stores, typically salt, garlic, onion, paprika, cumin and pepper. I bring a small amount of Italian herbs and lemon pepper. Spike or any of the grill seasoning combos that are out on the shelves work well too.
I am part of a support unit. Most meals are dfac... Even lunch when they need to burn through leftovers. The spices help a lot with the heat in a pouch stuff they feed us
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