As for Officers going to Fort St-Jean, my buddies are there. They will have shuttle buses to go to the Mega every day. They moved there the day after the parade, I tell you, it's very tight in there. They were as happy as us to see us leaving.
About same or different courses, I know the subjects are almost the same between IAP and BMQ. How it's taught and the way the staff drive us may be different. The whole IAP/BOTP is oriented toward leadership, responsability, lead by example, difference enough. They ask us to be leader right now, not tomorrow. That means, take action, make a decision and be responsible for it.
SamIAm said:
Take the little wax paper baggy things of cereal out of the mini-boxes at breakfast time and stash them in your pocket. You can fit a couple in your pockets and that way if you miss a meal you still have food. Beef jerky stays fresh forever and also fits handily in pockets. Sunflower seeds are gold and can become a negotiable instrument in dire moments.
To add to your comment, I many times smuggled food outside the cafeteria, never been caught. To play it a better way, don't smuggle, just buy some energy bars. Anyway, there machines all over the base. Even though we had 5 mins to eat, I never went hungry. The Mega is a 5 stars hotel, keep that in mind.
SamIAm said:
Some of those little life lessons learned on CAP. I missed TONS of meals because of lineups but I never went hungry.
Me neither while at Farnham. Seems that nerves and adrenaline keep you up.
Scrooge_Des said:
You ever stop to think that maybe this is part of the way they train you so that you CAN do your job to the best of YOUR ability EVEN if you have little nourishment? Timmy isn't gonna stop shooting at you or hold off on his suicide bomber so that you can have a chance to have your eggs and bacon.
One's do what one's can. If you have something to eat, you eat it. When you don't, you hang tight.
Scrooge_Des said:
Now you are passing the buck onto the staff. "proper scheduling"? I would suggest you put up a memo, and make sure you use those 2 words. I can tell you right now what the response will be. Once again, the rush is not only because of time restraints, it's also a way of seeing how you deal with stress. EVERYTHING is a test. Challenge yourself, and YES, suck it up. Everyone else here did.
Everything is a test? Most. When the platoon screws up, is late, whatever and you have to shorten meal time to follow the schedule, I understand. I don't think my staff ever let us 5-10 mins to eat just for the sake of a test. There's plenty of situations they can test us in. Not at the Mega. As for Farnham, we really didn't have a schedule, just timing, we did what we had too. And yes, we skipped meals.