CX wrote:Ah yes, low-crawling is loads of fun... I'm just glad we only had to do it through mud and not water.

hah, yeah, oh man. Terrible day,

. It was like 30 degrees. The water, too. Freezing. After like the first 50 yards when it was floating on your back w/ the rifle over your head, I was pretty sure that nothing on my body would still move. Somehow my knees and hips did, lol, that's all I needed to move. Then we had another 50y trench that we had to go through on our stomach, which was actually easier. The only bitch was that it was so cold and the barbed wire was pretty low so I kept getting my kevlar cover caught on barbed wire on the first one. It finally just came off and I stuffed it in my cargo pocket. Which was great b/c then on the 2nd trench, the barbed wire just skidded over my kevlar instead of hooking on it, haha. Really you were supposed to get low enough so it didn't touch you but it was just so chaotic w/ the freezing water that it was hard to stay focused on staying low. When we got done, everyone was like frozen solid and shaking and we had to unload the unused blanks out of our mags and like practically nobody could do it until they gave us the hint, "Remove one and then use the butt of the round to take out the others", because you just didn't have the fine motor control to execute the normally extremely simple motion of pushing down and out on the rounds, it was just impossible. Hands were completely numb, it was like excruciatingly painful to touch anything, lol. Pretty sure everyone went into hypothermia, b/c we had to hike like a mile or something back to the barracks and then shower off our gear outside. Yay Marine Corps

And yeah, I had scabs on my elbows for a good 2 and a half weeks after that from the low crawl part itself
