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Author Topic: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416  (Read 74830 times)

Kagus

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #135 on: May 08, 2011, 11:12:56 am »

Yet another weekend spent...  Nice to get some sleep.

Friday afternoon had another point of interest.  Having apparently run out of terminal aunts, Colagirl reintroduced the idea of seeing a movie together.  Time and place were decided upon, and I went down to the center a little early so that I could prepare a little extra of my special brand of charm...

As those of you who have been paying attention know, she bought me a late cola for my birthday.  I also knew that during her leave of absence, she also experienced another year's milestone date.  Not letting on to the fact that I knew this, I bought a bottle of cola and tied a bow around it using a strand of the bright red and yellow warning tape we're given as part of a soldier's essential items.

I sat around in the cafe for a while and waited for her to show up until a couple minutes before the film started.  Not having seen hide nor tail of her, I just walked into the movie theater and took a quick glance around.

Apparently, she must have a truly extreme sense of the term "in good time"...  I arrived half an hour early to take care of my various articles before the film, and spent that time watching the only entrance (-that people know about/use...).  Because of this, her presence in the seventh row must have meant that she'd been sitting there for a rather long time...  Not to fret for her entertainment however, as she had a full entourage with her.  Silly me for thinking this would be a more private affair...

...and, indeed, silly me for thinking this would be much of an affair at all.  While she was her usual friendly and chatty self, the fact that she mentioned how excited she was for the next leave of absence so she could go home and see her sweetheart made it fairly clear to me that I wasn't exactly targeted in her sights.

So, I watched Fast and Furious 5 with a super-duper-awesome military discount (resulting in ten bucks total...), ate some snacks, and went back home.  Not so much as a peep since then.


Saturday was savored with my standard plan of waking up a little too early and then just slacking about meaninglessly until brunch started.  Feeling I'd earned it, I decided that I would take my evening outside the barracks walls and snatch a few Happy Hour beers (closer to Happy Half, thanks to the pub opening late and stopping Happy Hour ten minutes before they say they do...).  Strangely, I was one of only two people standing outside the doors at opening time.  Spent the first period sitting in there with my new acquaintance from the neighboring military camp, talking about random aspects of military life and exchanging amusing stories about our officers.

About ten minutes before Happy Hour was over, a group from my platoon came in and the party really almost started.  For once in my time here, they actually played some halfway decent music...  And that gave a certain boost to the overall morale of us grunts, but even without that I think we would've managed to have a fairly decent time, due merely to the ramshackle gang of lunatics that the group was composed of.

The rest of the evening was slightly less shiny...  I cut out early (in relation to the others...), and for the first time got a chance to use my fancy new ID card to get in through the gate...

...get in through the gate...

...

Okay, why in hell's blue blistering blazes ISN'T THIS THING WORKING?


Yeah.  I've waited damn near four months to get my card, and now I find out that the goddamn thing doesn't even work properly.  Luckily, another group of soldiers were coming back at around the same time and were kind enough to let me in after testing my card out and declaring it non-functional.

I noticed that, after 7 and a half beers in three hours and a light dinner, I was spending a markedly higher degree of concentration on walking in a mostly straight line back to the barracks.

Coming back into the room, I was greeted by the familiarly depressing sight of everyone jacked in to their laptops and about as oblivious to the world as I was about to be.  Crossing over to my bed to put my jacket down, I noticed a certain creeping need arise from somewhere under my solar plexus...

Time to make my way to a toilet.  Fast.


I managed to make it all the way across the room before I felt the pressurized tingling in my lower jaw which is the dead-sure sign of Things To Come...  Up.  Knowing my chances of reaching Porcelain Heaven down in the restroom were nil, I wrapped my arms lovingly around one of the sinks and held on for dear life.

My lover's serenade (in Bass tone) to the plumbing fixture generated a concerned response from the room's other inhabitants;

*clicketyclicketyclicky*
"Oh...  Dude..."
*clickaclicka*
"...goddamn firebats..."

Attempts to loosen my death grip from the sink proved far too daunting for me to proceed with.  I eventually managed to rip someone's attention away from their computer long enough to get me a chair, so that my disturbingly unstable legs could take a load off.

Checking my watch throughout the various acts of my semi-liquid opera, I discovered that the show had gone on for well over an hour.  During this time I'd managed to fit in around five independent acts, with assorted intermissions while the stage crew regained their verve.


Realizing that my esophagus had until further notice become a one-way street, I drank a minimal amount of water and carefully shambled my way over to my bed after the curtains had finally fallen on what critics had hailed as the most stunning show of the year (one audience member was so overcome by the experience that he felt compelled to leave the auditorium).  Bracing myself for a break in my "Never Hungover" record the next morning, I removed what clothes I could manage and fell asleep with a bare chest, one sock, and my pants unzipped.

Waking up to take sips of water throughout the night, I finally awoke this morning with, fascinatingly, not so much as a trace of a headache.  All I had was a hankerin' for some more non-alcoholic hydration and a mildly unstable plumbing system (it's STILL complaining a little bit...  When I clean house, I really wring the rag out).


Well, gotta try everything once...  Think I'm gonna make a mental note not to try it again though. 

I also have to question why I felt the need to write "siht" and "fkuc" on my knuckles...  Particularly why I felt it was so important to intentionally misspell them.

Strife26

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #136 on: May 08, 2011, 11:18:24 am »

Sounds like lots of fun, Kagus. I've never actually got an ID card that would work in automatic systems as well. Heck if I know why, but I guess that the microchips don't like me for some reason.
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Kagus

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #137 on: May 09, 2011, 02:15:39 pm »

Three days til leave, three days til leave, three days til leave...

So, yeah, Monday.  This week we're supposed to be working with full-scale upkeep and organization of our troop's equipment inventory so that we're ready and raring to go for the next exercise.

Let's look at how the day went...


Inspection:  A rather bored officer comes into the room, walks around a bit, squelches his natural standards for the sake of not having to think about the room again, then walks out.  We then spend so much time pulling the rest of our officers together that we start the morning assembly process after the other troops have already finished.

Assembly:  We receive note that we'll be divvied up into two groups.  Of those three groups, one will be taking a radiocom refresher course, one will assemble in the barracks' living room and await further instructions, one will follow after a sergeant after assembly on a specific assignment, and the fourth and final group will start maintenance on equipment along with everyone else.

After assembly:  Everyone meets up in the living room and awaits further instructions for fifteen minutes.

After fifteen minutes:  The second lieutenant arrives and jokes around with a few of the soldiers for a while before informing everyone that we haven't booked any of the various warehouse-garages on camp property, so we can't unload any of our equipment for maintenance until tomorrow.  We are then sent outside to await further instruction.

Outside:  The troop is divided up into two groups again.  One group is sent inside to prepare for the exercise they are starting today, the other group is sent to the recreational center to do work out on the climbing wall, the third group goes off to take their radio refresher, and the fourth group is sent to perform maintenance on equipment that doesn't exist.

Later:  The fourth group has spontaneously split into several smaller divisions.  A sergeant vanishes mysteriously.  Ten people take off to pack a tent.

Much later:  The sergeant returns and gives the remainder of the group a new, clear, distinct order;  go over to that building and check the heater units that have previously been checked, sent in for maintenance, and checked at the workshop.  You know, just to see if they're working or not.

At the building:  Nobody has keys to get inside, and the door wasn't left open.  We receive a new order;  walk around to the other side of the building.  Quickly now!

Other side of the building:  Someone finds a truck and the container that holds all the heating units.  We stand around helpfully while they load the container onto the truck.  A random bystander is given the assignment to check if the jerrycans strapped to the truck have fuel in them.

Later:  The truck drives around the building with the container.  We are instructed to go back around again and stand on that side.  The bystander who checked the jerrycans is forgotten and has to carry both cans around the side of the building while following the truck.

First side of the building:  Twelve people do the work of two men and unload the heating units.  We then stand by and await further orders because there's no electricity to test them with.  Someone looks to see if there are any sergeants nearby.

After some waiting:  A sergeant arrives and says that ten of the twelve people there don't need to be there.  Some hand-picking ensues, and most everyone is sent off to use the remaining hour and a half until lunch to exercise without supervision.

Lunch:  I spend twenty minutes polishing my shoes because I have nothing better to do.  The inspection officer is too busy eating to bother checking the soldiers entering the mess.

After lunch:  With the radio refresher course over and no sign of maintainable equipment in sight, we are given the command to go in and change into warmer underwear, a long undershirt, the water-resistant field uniform and our combat vest.  We are given seven minutes.

Twenty minutes later:  The sergeant returns and collects us before leading us along the edge of the fence, out through the unguarded opening, and up into the clearing on the other side so that we can practice lying on wet ground with cold metal in our hands.

After two hours of running and jumping:  I am called back mid-way through tossing an imaginary grenade to receive a message from the sergeant.  I am to run like mad back up to base and talk with the priest in the military command building.

Base:  Wet, covered in dirt and grass and carrying a rifle I enter into the priest's office.  He offers me a foam mat to sit on, and we talk for a while about how people pronounce my name in the states.  After this, he informs me that just because I'm an atheist doesn't mean I can't be a priest assistant, something I knew when applying for the position (which includes waffle duty on Friday night), and that of the two candidates for the position I was the most likely one to receive his recommendation for the position.

Evening:  The mess had fish on the menu.  Not feeling particularly keen on that, I ate some fish instead.

*End of Duty*

Sheb

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #138 on: May 09, 2011, 02:20:40 pm »

I love the whole personal initative, choice and democracy in the army. :p
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Strife26

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #139 on: May 09, 2011, 06:23:23 pm »

That's the Army, whatever country it might be in. Honestly, I love the chaos.
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Pnx

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #140 on: May 09, 2011, 10:55:36 pm »

It makes a fellow proud to be a soldier.

Evening:  The mess had fish on the menu.  Not feeling particularly keen on that, I ate some fish instead.
That last part I'd like some clarification on, I'm assuming it's not a typo.
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olemars

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #141 on: May 10, 2011, 02:05:12 am »

I actually expected you to apply for an assistant position. You seem like a cunning fella and all the cunning ones quickly find out how to get their year to be less dreary.

Our base's priest assistant was (in addition to friday waffle duty) also in charge of the base rec room/library, which apparently meant hogging the playstation 2 all day and downloading porn on the only internet connected computer available that wasn't one of those crappy thin clients.
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Kagus

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #142 on: May 14, 2011, 12:47:06 pm »

Oh, right, was gonna write something today...  Meh.


Let's see...  Well, Tuesday was the "real" start of our full-scale maintenance week(ish), which meant one of the other groups got to use the radio classroom for a refresher course.

However, we apparently still didn't have access to the space we needed for maintenance.  So what was to be done with the people who had already gone through the refresher?

Why yes, they did run up and down the mountain and then traverse the base-wide obstacle course while wearing a backpack.  How did you know?

During one of the classroom breaks I was talking with a chap who said "Damn, this radio refresher is dull"...  At this, I reminded him that we had absolutely no grounds to complain, since it was pure random luck that we ended up in the time slot that we did.

Despite the fears of many, we did not change places after lunch.  Since we STILL hadn't gotten the space, the officers gave up trying to find random junk for us to do and just told everyone to go over to the warehouse we wanted and help the people using it to clear their junk out.

What followed was a couple hours of assisting three tired goons with the organizational skills of meth addicts move the remaining equipment of Brigade Command, a field camp so intensely huge and complicated that it takes THREE DAYS to set up or take down.  Imagine if this was entertaining or not.

Once we'd finally sent them packing, it was our turn to start drooling over the space.  But, sadly, the day was essentially over by that point, so all we got to do was move some more things from one place to another before we called it a job well done.

Wednesday was a very special day set up by the Happy Fuzzy Soldier's Wellness Organization for Peace and Love (from now on referred to as "TMO", because screw acronyms).  We were to have a standard assembly and room inspection, and then our officers would essentially just piss off for the rest of the day and leave us to the will of the TMO.

The period before lunch was set down as an entertaining but HILARIOUSLY PHYSICALLY DEMANDING inter-base obstacle course.  After that we had roughly two hours to faff about and theoretically eat lunch (Pizza!) before meeting up at the wellness center to learn about the importance of that day and also WIN COOL PRIZES YAY!

Tough beans for the obstacle course, I had my Priest Assistant orientation meeting at exactly the same time.  Whoopsies, couldn't imagine how that happened.

So while everyone else was walking tightropes, pulling trucks and seeing how many push-ups they could take, I was sitting on a comfy chair in a cozy little basement room and discussing waffle tactics while consuming cake and coffee.  After orientation, wherein I got to be better acquainted with the old assistant and meet my new counterpart and partner-in-prayer from the next camp over.  I also got to meet two other priests from the surrounding area...  Apparently, being a priest means you're automatically awarded a disturbingly high military rank.

This puts my current counter of high-ranking priestly authorities to three...  Our priest, who's a fairly amicable chap who enjoys the odd tune from Pink Floyd or Dire Straits, an infantry priest who seems like he'd have an easier time taking a pint with you than expounding the perils of sin, and of course CRAZY PSYCHO PRIESTESS (who, luckily, will mysteriously vanish for three months later on in the year).

I mean, whoah...  She's the kind of Christian that freaks out other Christians (I should know, I was sitting next to the other priests).  When her revelry in Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ finally trailed off long enough to think clearly (for her...), she remembered a previous appointment and had to skip away...  But not before wishing the rest of us "A blessed day".


I was given, along with my counterpart, a quick tour of the surroundings and description of our duties.  Okay, yep, ring the bells...  Which type of waffle-mix is best...  Coffee machine...  How to choose a film for movienight...  Yeah, got that.  You're saying we get three days out of the standard workweek to fulfill the demands of our position?  I can probably learn to live with that.

The meeting ended a couple hours before lunch break.  Theoretically speaking, I was supposed to meet up with the team I would have been taking the course with, had I not received a higher calling...  But since I would be doing little other than just following them around like a lost puppy and maybe cheering now and again, neither I nor the old assistant saw any need for me to do that.  Instead, I used the time to kick back, relax, and change my cellphone's ringtone to this.


After that we had some basic speeches about how we're all so important, and how the military needs soldiers (DURH!  YOU DON'T SAY??!) in order to work properly.  Then we had some so-so standup with a few good lines, then barbecue (mmm...  Potato salad on a bun), then a concert.

First part of the concert was a cover band to "warm us up" for the main event.  These guys were actually part of the sound and light crew that had been hired in to set up the equipment in the first place.  Funfact.

Three middle-aged, overweight bald guys got up on the scene, picked up their preferred instruments...


...and then proceeded to rock the F**K out like it was nobody's business.  Warm up?  Good grief, we had three people crowd-surfing simultaneously!  The bassist pulled out electric blue alien shades with built-in LEDs for the latter part of the show!  We howled like maniacs for an encore when they tried to leave!

And then when they finally were allowed off the stage, we got to be entertained by two of Oslo's most hip gangsta rappers.

...

...

Yeah, no, that's not a problem with my writing.  That's a problem with society's misconception of itself.  These guys were genius comedians without even knowing it. 

I wanted the cover band back.



Thursday was the super extreme real military deal...  This was the Big League...  This is what we had been waiting for, what we had been trained for, what we lived for!

But it was still periodical maintenance, regardless of how you want to describe it.  We hosed down tents and counted chairs for chrissakes, how interesting did you think it was going to be?

The only really interesting point from that day was right at the end when we had to turn our weapons in at the locker, and I got the presiding sergeant to burst into laughter by addressing myself by the nickname he'd called me over a month before.


Friday was a day of waiting...  My plane left the ground at 21:30, and the bus to get to that plane left the barracks at 20:00.  Those were the only two points marked down for the entire day.  Thrilling, isn't it?

Well, actually, it kinda was.  When the inspection officer came into our room on Thursday night, she asked if any of the late-leavers might be up to assist with a certain project.  After hearing what it was, she got three volunteers from our room, including me.


The year's class of student officers had left the previous Saturday for their "Mastering" period, also known as "Hell Week".  After six days of insane maneuvers without food or sleep, they were on schedule for coming back to camp...  But it couldn't be THAT easy, now could it?

Ten people had been pulled from volunteers like us to serve as wounded at a military patrol crash site.  Some got to sit in the cars, a couple were "fuck-ups" (shell-shocked goons who run around distracting and/or disrupting the people performing first aid), one guy sat on a pile of twigs with a critical bulletwound in his thigh...

...and I had apparently been tossed 45 degrees out to the left of a crashed vehicle with no broken windows and landed in a sitting position with two broken legs next to a cement block that I had somehow also managed to cut my head on.  Yeah, not really sure how that was supposed to have gone down...

When the students arrived, it was full chaos.  Screams, shrieks, burning wreckage, blood everywhere, a vehicle's horn pressed down...  Absolutely beautiful stuff.


Although I may not have been prioritized as the most critical patient, I was by far the most convincing (in my opinion, anyways...).  When you manage to freak out the other casualties, you're probably letting out a good howling.  Some sobs of pain, random shock-gibberish and yelled curses just added to the effect.  I also managed to test the alertness of my handlers by grasping at weapons a few times.  Man, I would not have wanted to have me as a patient...


When they'd finished carrying all of us back to base (hard enough on a good day, but these were guys who had gone without the two essential energy sources living creatures have for almost a week), us wounded-type folks were let off duty to sit out of sight behind a container.  From there, we heard some random berating from the officers, and then a very disturbing phrase:

"Mouthguards in."


We were shortly thereafter officially let off from duties, and allowed to walk back to base.  On the way, we saw all the students walking in single-file groups, their hands on the shoulders of the man in front.  Why?  Because they were all blinded by hoods and were being sent into a garage with loud music playing to navigate their way around two people who were there to beat the crap out of them as they passed by.

Later, when we were cleaning up in our rooms, we saw the students running past our windows...  After a bit of investigation and observation, we learned that everyone had to run the base-wide obstacle course after the blind-beating.

Twice.


Oddly, I don't feel any strong desire to become an officer right now.  Funny how that is...


Evening:  The mess had fish on the menu.  Not feeling particularly keen on that, I ate some fish instead.
That last part I'd like some clarification on, I'm assuming it's not a typo.
Instead of going down to the mess and eating some cod-'n'-potatoes, I took a few bites of tuna jerky before calling it a night.

Coco146

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #143 on: May 19, 2011, 01:17:13 pm »

In britain we have no military service, we do have cadets thou.  and cadets in drink enduced commas are regularly left outside...
in the middle of a field...
miles from the camp...
in the middle of the night.....
naked.....

I would almost join the real military, but i prefer science.
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Kagus

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #144 on: May 20, 2011, 03:19:43 am »

In britain we have no military service, we do have cadets thou.  and cadets in drink enduced commas are regularly left outside...
in the middle of a field...
miles from the camp...
in the middle of the night.....
naked.....

Generally when a Norwegian makes it to a drink-induced comma, he's out for an entire period...

And they seem to be pretty good about taking off their clothes and lying down in odd places all by themselves, so we don't have to do it for them.  Rather independent race, the Norwegians.

Kandi Apple

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #145 on: May 23, 2011, 10:30:49 am »

Quote
And they seem to be pretty good about taking off their clothes and lying down in odd places all by themselves, so we don't have to do it for them.  Rather independent race, the Norwegians.

Gotta love the visuals!  Wish you still had your GLORIOUS HAIR though.
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MarcAFK

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #146 on: May 24, 2011, 08:21:21 am »

Nooo, not the hair! :'(
But you do look like a professional killer, now :P
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They're nearly as bad as badgers. Build a couple of anti-buzzard SAM sites marksdwarf towers and your fortress will look like Baghdad in 2003 from all the aerial bolt spam. You waste a lot of ammo and everything is covered in unslightly exploded buzzard bits and broken bolts.

Kagus

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #147 on: May 24, 2011, 10:00:13 am »

But you do look like a professional killer, now :P


You were saying something?


Anyways, yeah, back from leave and not at all disappointed with being stuck this far up Norway's butthole for the next six weeks!  Also having no problem with the 30 kilometer march (with pack) on Thursday, the almost-certain jogging trip we'll have tomorrow so we're good and stiff for said march, the two exercises we'll be pulling over the next few weeks, and the fact that we're working late into the evening today.

Nope, nothing wrong with this at all.  Why, I don't even know why they send us on vacation in the first place, it's so nice here!


I'll try writing up something more detailed later on tonight...  I probably won't, but I'll try.  It's the thought that counts, eh?

Kandi Apple

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #148 on: May 24, 2011, 12:05:59 pm »

NICE!! You (almost) convince me to join the military  ::)
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Kagus

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Re: All I Want For Xmas is an HK416
« Reply #149 on: May 24, 2011, 01:38:16 pm »

Well, yep, back from leave...  Six weeks until next time (little weekend hop before that though), massive march before the nearest weekend, and apparently I managed to relax a little TOO much during my time off.  Just a little warm-up exercise to keep us in shape and my heart was bouncing off the walls.

Today, we have performed even more intense maintenance.  This effectively means putting things as neatly as possible along ultra-straight lines, and planning a path through all of it so the big cheeses can walk around and count our stuff without getting confused (you know how high-ranking officers are).  Also, painting cars.

Painting camouflage is a rather interesting experience...  Vast quantities of masking tape are consumed so that you get those lovely ultra-clean and straight lines between different colors, just to make sure you mimic nature as much as possible.  Also, sharp and jagged edges/corners.  Gotta have those jagged edges.

Aside from that, we've...  Well, the day has effectively been divided between performing maintenance and not performing maintenance, as people seem most content to test and double-test the field cots and office chairs in our stock.  Unfortunately for me, I have a work ethic.  That generally means that I wander around for half an hour with a headache looking for something to do, and then when I finally give in to join the crowd and take a load off the sergeant comes back and yells at everyone to get off their asses.

That...  Might have something to do with why we wound up having extra service hours until 7:30 in the evening.  Gotta love paint.


Oh, wait a second...  We also had a seminar regarding how we should throw out our trash, and how important it is for The Environment that we pick up after ourselves after shooting at imaginary people.

That's when we were introduced to a rather hilarious quote wherein some toilet-head figured the military ought to be a role model when it came to protecting and preserving The Environment.  This, after we've been introduced to the HILARIOUSLY dirty-burning heating units used by everyone all the time, and witnessed the truly terrifying consumption of diesel performed by one little field command over the course of three days.

The speaker informed us of the proper method of sorting our refuse...  These things go into the glass/metal container, these things go into the "special waste" container, and everything else goes into the "shit for luck" container.

He was mildly surprised when he found out that we don't even have a glass container, we've just got the "wild grabs" kind.  Not that anyone really gives a damn at 7:00 AM...

After a while, it became clear that the speaker was about as interested in giving the presentation as we were in getting it (falling...  Asleep...  Whoah, that's some WEIRD stuff he's got written on his slide!  Oh, no, wait, I just managed to dream alternate text for a couple seconds.  Whee).


Yep...  Was gonna attempt my secret project codenamed "shoot yourself to sleep", but we got off work so late today that I really can't be arsed to do much else than just prep for bed the usual way.

Some people have a "nine-to-five" work schedule...  I have a nine-to-five sleep schedule.


Oh, yeah...  Three days after we got back and we still haven't gotten our rifles back yet.  All this talk of shooters reminded me.  Funny.
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