What was the worst duty you ever had to pull?

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  • Michael Tompkins
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 276

    #1

    What was the worst duty you ever had to pull?

    In 1981, as a young MP, we had to take turns sitting at the desk at the station. The duty was for 24 hours and you could not go to sleep. I had just come off of 24 hour CQ when I was told that I had to go to the field to help guard a downed Huey UH-1. They gave me no time to pack any proper gear. This was near Marburg, FRG and it was February. Got there and was sent out to the perimeter to walk a 2 hour shift. It was about 20 degrees that day. We were set-up in a GP meduim for the duration. I pulled 2 more shifts, the last being at 2 am.

    I still had not been to sleep and was so tired while walking my post. My post, by the way, was about a 1/2 mile long path around the perimeter of the crashed helicopter. Snow was about 8-10 inches deep. I kept falling asleep while walking and falling down in the snow. I was hallucinating most of the time I was so tired...seeing things and talking to people that weren't even there. I had almost been up for 48 hours. I walked my post in Mickey Mouse boots and they made my feet sweat something awful. I wound up with imersion foot and could not walk for 2 days afterward. I almost received an Art 15 for not having a change of socks with me. They backed down when they found out the cricumstances. They didn't realize that I had just pulled CQ and had not slept. I was let off with a stern lecture by my platoon leader. Mike
  • Sean P Gilday
    Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 88

    #2
    Setting up a Morgue at the World Trade Center, worse than Iraq by far

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    • mike24d20
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2009
      • 1065

      #3
      Pulled a lot of 72 hr. back to back duty in korea. This was durning the Vietnam war years. 24 hr. on the tac site-24 on guard duty in the admin area below then back up to the tac site for another 24 hr. shift.
      AIM TRUE, YOU MIGHT HIT THE TARGET:

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      • Michaelp
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2009
        • 974

        #4
        I spent most of 18 months in a border SF "A" Camp, running ops and interacting with the locals.
        Great duty-I extended for more of it.
        Once in a while, the "B" team would be short an I'd have to spend a week or two there filling a spot.
        No ops, and most had the REMF mentality.
        Bad place for me. No disrespect to REMFs.

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        • Art
          Senior Member, Deceased
          • Dec 2009
          • 9256

          #5
          That's easy, the absolute worst was breakfast KP at the reception station the morning of my second day in the Army, I was 18, no sleep the night before of course so I was the walking dead by breakfast and that Ft. Puke Mess Sgt. took his mission to make our lives hell that day seriously.

          Compared to that lying under a missile in the snow in 10 degree weather replacing a wiring harness at 1:00 in the morning was a piece of cake.

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          • Michaelp
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2009
            • 974

            #6
            I had a near identical experience at Ft Puke, Nov 66 I still remember the wierd smells coming out of those messhalls at 0'dark thirty.---didn't need that memory==thanks

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            • Weasel
              Very Senior Member - OFC
              • Aug 2009
              • 3696

              #7
              Standing in the chow line at Great Lakes in the winter time 1966. Looking at thousands of green lungers in the snow banks while waiting in line for chow. Clam chowder anyone? Yummy............

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              • joem
                Senior Member, Deceased
                • Aug 2009
                • 11835

                #8
                Burning honey buckets. They pulled me off that detail after I set the hillside on fire. Gee Sir, I didn't know diesel fuel expanded that much when it's on fire.

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                • stickhauler
                  Member
                  • Dec 2009
                  • 36

                  #9
                  Originally posted by joem
                  Burning honey buckets. They pulled me off that detail after I set the hillside on fire. Gee Sir, I didn't know diesel fuel expanded that much when it's on fire.
                  So THAT'S how you get off that "duty." I wish I'd thought of that!

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                  • Rick
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 2435

                    #10
                    I was in the Great Lakes October 5th until November 25th of 1965.

                    I know of what Mr Weasel speaks of. Really gross. Skipped a lot of suppers and got down to 120 pounds. Besides the green lungers they would exercise us after eating until people started puking. After the first one started it would just go through the ranks of 100 men. I figured it was better to not eat than to puke up after meals. Was worried that I would loose my teeth as they were all loose and bleeding from what I thought was malnutrition.

                    Mr. Odis our Company Commander thought this all very entertaining.

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                    • sop2510
                      Senior Member
                      • Mar 2010
                      • 313

                      #11
                      I went to submarine school in New London after completing two years of nuclear training. I was a third class petty officer (NCO). While we were waiting for school to start they sent us the base's Navy Exchange grocery store to bag groceries. That's when I knew I would never make a career of the Navy.
                      sigpic
                      When your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.

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                      • Oyaji
                        Very Senior Member - OFC
                        • Oct 2009
                        • 4373

                        #12
                        Originally posted by sop2510
                        I went to submarine school in New London after completing two years of nuclear training. I was a third class petty officer (NCO). While we were waiting for school to start they sent us the base's Navy Exchange grocery store to bag groceries. That's when I knew I would never make a career of the Navy.
                        Yeah but, were you able to keep the tips? Some of those Commissary baggers make some pretty good money, especially on paydays.

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                        • Bill F
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 311

                          #13
                          I was an Army medic,91b20,had to work on a burn ward,1971

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                          • Quadguy
                            Senior Member
                            • Sep 2009
                            • 167

                            #14
                            We burned the Sh(*&(*T house down , we forgot to pull the drum halves out of the thing before we lit them up with the diesel/gas mix . They let us only pull perimeter and convoy duty after that which is what we were there to do. Quad 50 gunner RVN attached to the 1/7 Cav.

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                            • Dan Shapiro
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 5864

                              #15
                              Cleaning the grease pit at Consolidated Mess #4, Ft Devens Mass, July 1967. My fatigues went into the trash can, couldn't wash the stink out of them.
                              "No man's life, liberty, or property is safe, while Congress is in session." Mark Twain

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