Ray80 sends some excellent advice to our DEPs
Since we are all so open about our trash eating days, I have a OSUT trash eating short for you guys. I was on duty squad and had to police up the chow area, well the DS's left all the pizza boxes there. We checked all the boxes and nothing was in there. We got desperate and checked one already in a trash back...BINGO, half a pizza. There was about 12 of us and we all got a good little bit of it and it was cold and I think some of the others had some gator-raid on their piece, but damn that was some good shit.
- Gravity Man
- Ranger
- Posts: 198
- Joined: November 17th, 2003, 2:15 pm
Re: Wise advice from Paratrooper BratAttack
Damn straight. I don't know how many times I've walked away during field chow with my cargo pockets, etc filled with bread and fruit to share w/ my battle buddy. You'll be surprised how quickly you lose your inhibitions with being clean and proper. Trash bags, the floor/ground....it doesn't matter. Food is merely fuel. Be practical and a thinker, it'll help you in the long run.Ray80 wrote:Oh man. So true about the chow, Paratrooper ArmyBrat. I was about to reccommend the exact same advice, but held off because I would be telling our brothers to eat out of the trash. Plus, you should have seen how sick I got when using the trash as a class I resupply AND an approved food source.Paratrooper Brat Attack wrote:If any Depper is afraid of weight loss. No worries. Just eat everything and anything you can. Take peoples chow they don't want. Hell I ate from the trash when the DS's weren't looking. I gained 28lbs in OSUT. Just be sure to do PT at night because you don't get PT'd enough! PT PT and more PT. The rest is a breeze.....
-MattThe best was when you work duty squad and hold open the trash bags for the rest of the company.... waiting to snag two more trays of chow and a piece of cake. Oh yeah, volunteering to clean the chow hall on Sundays is always a great way to get the D-Fac workers to hook you up. :D The only other way is to become a chow thief, which is a violation of a couple of Army values.
Extra PT like you said has been the only way to go. There is basically no strength work in OSUT. It has been all endurance work. Since Exodus, I've brought myself back up to my fighting weight and feel a helluva lot stronger.
-Ray