Ya know, when I look back at it (what I do remember...), we didn't have much time for relaxation or downtime.
Reading, other than an occasional Stars and Stripes I can't recall any serious reading matter available back then. In 65' the war was ramping up rapidly. There was too many Marines and supplies were very short. Ships would wait 10 to 14 days for a anchorage in the harbor in Danang. On the east coast there were 6 ships leaving for VN each day. We were a total of six - 5 man hatch teams and could only off-load 3 a week and with no place to store the cargo. Planning was not one of Saigon's strong points. Marines were wiping there ass with foliage in the bush but there was plenty of beer and scotch in the NCO club in Saigon.
Thus, the origin of SNAFU!
Except for a brief period early on we worked 14 hours a day with one day off every 3 weeks. Sleep was about the only thing, other than a letter or two a month, that allowed me to zone out of the present situation. I could sleep standing, kneeling or leaning against something. When I hear someone say their 'tired' they don't have a clue. I'm not sure if I would have read even if I was able. I was not a book worm at all. Even to this day I read very selectively and mostly current events.
If anyone is interested Vice Adm Edwin Hooper wrote of the part of the VN war that went almost forgotton. It had to do with what I he called the battle of logistics early on in the war. The title is Mobility, Support, Endurance (278pp - 1972) Here is a PDF link:
https://archive.org/details/mobilitysupporte00hoop (it's out of print for may years)
We did whatever worked and as much as we could get of it.
Sorry for the history lesson, I didn't mean to hijack your thread.Raven.
Ba
Reading, other than an occasional Stars and Stripes I can't recall any serious reading matter available back then. In 65' the war was ramping up rapidly. There was too many Marines and supplies were very short. Ships would wait 10 to 14 days for a anchorage in the harbor in Danang. On the east coast there were 6 ships leaving for VN each day. We were a total of six - 5 man hatch teams and could only off-load 3 a week and with no place to store the cargo. Planning was not one of Saigon's strong points. Marines were wiping there ass with foliage in the bush but there was plenty of beer and scotch in the NCO club in Saigon.
Thus, the origin of SNAFU!
Except for a brief period early on we worked 14 hours a day with one day off every 3 weeks. Sleep was about the only thing, other than a letter or two a month, that allowed me to zone out of the present situation. I could sleep standing, kneeling or leaning against something. When I hear someone say their 'tired' they don't have a clue. I'm not sure if I would have read even if I was able. I was not a book worm at all. Even to this day I read very selectively and mostly current events.
If anyone is interested Vice Adm Edwin Hooper wrote of the part of the VN war that went almost forgotton. It had to do with what I he called the battle of logistics early on in the war. The title is Mobility, Support, Endurance (278pp - 1972) Here is a PDF link:
https://archive.org/details/mobilitysupporte00hoop (it's out of print for may years)
We did whatever worked and as much as we could get of it.
Sorry for the history lesson, I didn't mean to hijack your thread.Raven.
Ba