Right, so, back from leave, finally...
So I took a train at 11:00AM to get to the airport in time for the bus which would leave 01:30PM, so I could get to the military terminal for a flight scheduled for 04:00PM, which we had to meet up two hours early for.
As it turned out, the
friggin' huge military airplane we were supposed to take had come down with an Easter sniffle and was canned. As such, we had to take a standard charter flight, which needed an extra hour to get ready for the big show.
So when we finally left the ground at 05:15PM, we were all quite happy to stop waiting on the ground. Now we could just sit back and wait in the air for a few hours as we puttered back up to base.
When we got back, we were welcomed by a short supper which was interrupted by an obligatory meeting from one of the chaps who came in last year. This was in regards to how all of them would be moving in with all of us, so we'd need to do some heavy lifting.
Yes, some very heavy lifting... Why? Because with all the junk you have to pack into the military closets, and all the time you have to spend doing it, it's much easier to just pick up and shove the whole damned closet. This is also pretty much the only option when the guy you're helping to move hasn't arrived back from leave yet, which was the case for us. Nice fellow, rather quiet... Came from a six-man room with three people in it, so they had split the seven closets between them.
...yeah. Just what I felt like doing at nine in the evening.
We've also received a plan for the rest of the week, which has been hung up in the hallway. A quick glance is really all one needed to see what we had in store for us as a "Welcome Back!", courtesy of the Norwegian Armed Forces...
Here's what we did today, as a fair example of how the whole week looks: First, run for an hour. Then, switch into full combat gear and run around in the forest for two and a half hours. Lunch break... After lunch, get a practice-run of the half-snowed-in 30-point obstacle course. This lasts around three hours, and consists of crawling through mud, water, snow AND ice. In the only clean uniform you have left, thanks to the first aid course we had before taking off, and all the fake blood it used.
Yep. Tomorrow we have sprinting, followed by combat training, followed by more combat training, followed by combat training the next day... And then it's time for the extra-special cleaning we have every weekend which is inspected all the more closely because it's theoretically supposed to last for a couple days until next Monday.
So, yeah. First you earn your leave, then you have to pay for it. That's how we roll. But, hey, I've got things to look forward to... For one, I'm damned curious as to what's gonna happen when I bump into Cola-girl again (who shall from here on be referred to as "Scully", due to her being a pretty redhead of diminutive stature). For another point, I might get an opportunity to un-rust my special masseuse powers, as I've gotten a potential volunteer labrat just recently.
Note: One of the sergeants has started referring to us as Special Forces, as a play on the Norwegian term for the Field Command soldiers that we really are ("Kommando", same word used for the real commandos).