Jim Seggie said:
I take exception to this.
We cannot stop in the middle of a patrol for Bloggins the BodyBuilder to eat his snack or after a platoon attack or whatever so he can scarf rations down. Not going to happen.
This is the Army, not day care.
I am all for physical fitness, and I in no way said there is not time to eat on ex. You might want to wind your neck in.
Rider Pride said:
I understand what you are trying to say but....
Even with a BMI of 32 and some spare around the waist, I have yet to meet a power lifter that I can't out run or out ruck. Not to mention, those types do not do well on selections in the CF. personally, I find people like that do it to look good, not for improved job performance.
Strong like bull, run like rock, does not work in our lines of work. You have to have a balanced fitness level. And the mental toughness to make it go far.
Jim Seggie said:
While we're on the topic, how about those super fit in garrison types that need to eat every two hours or they wilt. Seen it. Not impressed.
Field fitness and garrison fitness are different IMO.
Doing 4-5 platoon attacks per day with patrolling at night demands a different mental attitude as well. We can't stop for Blogins the bodybuilder to eat every two hours.
Underway said:
You can and you should. You should be constantly hydrating and eating during those exercises. Either way it's better than stopping for Chubby Mcfatterson after 100m of a section attack, or just standing around in 36 degree heat.
Give bloggins the scran from your IMP and tell him to cram his pie hole whenever he can. He's probably bragging about how much he can press when he should be snacking anyways.
Underway said:
Sorry missed that one. My point was that I'd rather have a powerlifter that has to eat all the time than a guy who's obese. Next time I'll reference your post vice trying to post something to highlight the silliness of the idea that you don't have time to eat on an exercise as listed above. ???
Point 1
We all can acknowledge there is a difference between field fitness and gym/garrison fitness, but at the same time, its been clearly pointed out by guys who've been there and done that, that there is plenty of time on patrols to throw something with calories in your mouth...hell as someone pointed out, if you can drink while on patrol (which you should be hydrating) then you can damn well chew a protein bar or something as well.
Point 2
Bodybuilder =/= Powerlifter.
stop using them interchangeably, they are apples and oranges. Bodybuilders are all about size, definition, symmetry, Powerlifters are all about Performance aka being STRONG in squats, deadlifts and bench pressing (together all 3 carryover to A LOT) and then you have weightlifters who compete in the Snatch and Clean n Jerk. To be fair though I think we would be hard pressed to see any REAL bodybuilders in the CF. I mean i've read of 2 or 3 in the papers that were serving members who actually competed. The rest are just guys who take probably to many supplements and rely on those instead of having proper nutrition. Same goes for powerlifters and weightlifters...id be hard pressed to find more then 10-20 of each in the CF.
I will point out that there are/have been plenty of powerlifters or olympic lifters (not many bodybuilders) that were/are in the military. Usually these guys are not in the heavier weight classes though.
- Alex Viada (Marathoner/triathlete and powerlifter, bench presses 500+ RAW) 210-225'er
- Matt Kroczaleski (Cancer survivor, Pro powerlifter, NPC bodybuilder, and ex-Marine, 220lbs)
- Mike Tuchscherer (275'er with 900lbs raw squat, in the USAF, actually got in powerlifting through the AF when he joined the USAF academy powerlifting team)
To name a couple
Point 3
I honestly think the CF needs to put less emphasis on long distance running, if anything there should be more emphasis on sprints. How many guys had to run 5-10km while deployed (and I don't mean for PT while out there) i mean for a tactical situation. Odds are sprints, work capacity, strength (strength endurance, bodyweight strength and absolute strength) would be more valuable in those circumstances.
Point 4
I definitely think soldiers/sailors/airmen need to eat better, but this is not something we can enforce.