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Raring To Go

Following elements of the 112th Armor as they serve in Afghanistan.

Blogroll Me!
Name:
Location: East Texas, Texas, United States

Civilian Teacher of social studies, military infantryman/tanker and soon to be MP (blech)

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Happy Mother's Day!!!

Can no longer wish this to my own Mother, but to all the other Mother's out there:

May God keep you and bless you on this special day.

Mik

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Updates

Howdy all!

Sorry I have not been writing much lately, but there truly is not much going on...which I guess is a good thing, right?

Still on Gardez...getting settled in...we are trying to have new billets built for us to live in, but because they don't meet the standard template its causing a few problems.

The weather seems to be warming up...hitting in the 70s here...which is a pleasant change from the snow/sleet/rain/hail of the last couple of weeks.

I have been thinking a lot about my students and everyone out at Etoile, TAKS are coming up soon...study hard and do your teachers proud!!!


Mik

Friday, March 06, 2009

Quiet times

Its pretty quiet here in this little corner of Eastern Afghanistan.

The weather is warming, mostly. The mountains are beginning to shed their coats of winter snow. Occasionally we get some crazy weather...just a few days ago, we had rain, sleet, snow, hail and sunshine, all within a few hours.

Work progresses here...am learning a lot, and trying to get involved with the operations of the base.

Really hoping that I can start work on a Master's Degree soon, and make my time here productive (for me too).

Catch y'all later,

Mik

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Travel

50 hrs
Three countries
Three continents

I will say this, 747s are BIG.

They take about an hour or more to load or unload...

We left Ft. Lewis, WA on the evening of 24 Jan. We arrived at Frankfurt-Hahn Airport Sunday morning. We deplaned and went into the Tax-free zone and waited for the cleaning and refueling. Sunday evening, we re-plane and wait...

And wait...

We move and stop...

Deplane, buses take us into Frankfurt proper where we stay at a very nice hotel...

Monday morning, flight canceled, rescheduled for Monday PM...rumours abound...'No flights til Thursday' etc.

Monday evening - late, we board buses and move back to the plane, reboard and take off...bound for Kyrgyzstan.

Arrive at Manas AFB Tuesday morning...inprocess into theater...and wait.

Flights to Bagram announced...and cancelled

Bagram closed due to a C-17 landing without landing gear (this tends to be bad for the runway).

Bagram and Manas closed due to weather...

9 days pass.

We are told to manifest (prepare for flight) at 0045 (1245AM)...we show and wait...
At 5 we are told that the plane we are supposed to be on never left Bagram and the flight is cancelled...

No sleep...

Next night (Day 10 of our Kyrgyz exile) we do it again...but lo and behold the plane shows and we fly...arrive in Bagram around 1 AM, find our tents about 3...have to be up and at briefings at 7....briefings last until around 2300 (11PM)...bed down.

Next morning, more briefings...afternoon off (whew...no nap though)...evening briefings...

3AM show time for flight to Gardez.

We take two CH-47 Chinook helicopters...we run through 4 of 6 stops when one of them springs a minor leak....cram everyone on the other bird and finally!!! make it to Gardez.

And that is where I am, and where it looks as though I shall stay for the foreseeable future. Hope to have more news (and pictures) soon.

God bless,

Mik

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The story so far...

When I returned home from Afghanistan before my unit had changed. 5th Bn-112th Armor was gone. My old unit, Alpha Company in Huntsville, TX would now be Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC) 72nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion (BSTB). Essentially what that meant, was that we would have command and control of all the special (read low-density) troops that would normally be attached to the Brigade from the old Division Support Command (DISCOM). I had a couple of choices as to what I could do, because remaining a tanker was not one of them.

I could return to my roots as an infantryman (not happening—too old for that), I could become a mechanic, become an MP or find a new home. None of those were particularly appetizing, but I knew most of the people in Huntsville and wanted to stay. So I chose MP (because they tempted me with a lil mini-tank called the Armored Security Vehicle (ASV).

Early last year we were down at the Brigade headquarters in Houston undergoing an SRC. An SRC is a way to verify that you have all the necessary paperwork to be mobilized. During this SRC, there was a small table with two personnel at it. They were asking everyone if they would be interested in a career in Military Intelligence. I thought, sure, why not, they might even send me to the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, CA.

Time passes…no word from the MI people.

Early May, I get word, on a Monday, that I need to be in Austin on Tuesday for a Battalion inprocessing. I go…I find a couple of other guys from Huntsville there as well. I get offered a job that requires DLI…awesome…one catch, gotta deploy to Afghanistan first.

And, oh, by the way, we don’t know when your school will be to get you your new MOS…we are working on it.

I find out, two days before I have to be at the school…

School takes me from June to October…it is—interesting, and kinda fun…
After school, back to Austin, more paperwork, then we start PMT (pre-mobilization training). That takes us from end of October to the end of December. The Army graciously allows me to spend Thanksgiving with my family and then it is off to gloomy Ft. Lewis.

Training for mobilization is at once, excruciatingly boring and occasionally useful. We get 10 days at home over Christmas (called in the Army, Exodus).
January, back to Ft. Lewis, more training…including two weeks in the field that turn out to be extremely useful as well as fairly miserable (Ft. Lewis being rather chilly and damp).

Then, BIG NEWS, Cinnamon is going into labor (well, at least her water broke)…after dithering for 7 hours, they decide that I can go home…but I have to be back the next day. Whilst in the air, winging for home, Snookums is born, 9lbs 15oz…a big boy. (This is the second birth I have missed…coincidentally I was at Ft. Lewis when I missed Gus’ birth….heh. Have I mentioned that I don’t particularly like Ft. Lewis?)

The day after I get back to Lewis, it is time to leave…but that is for another story…maybe tomorrow?

God bless,

Mik

Travel and transient...

15 days in travel status, 4 countries, 3 continents...
19 days total transient status (continuing)...

I am finally at my destination (Gardez, Afghanistan) but no permanent quarters yet...

Will post a description of my travels and (hopefully) some pictures soon...

God bless,

Mik

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Changes and updates

Wow...not sure where to start...

Full details will have to wait until later, so just the headlines for now.

B V joined us last week...he was 9lbs 15oz and over 21"

I am at a waypoint stop en route to Afghanistan.

The rest of the family is at home, and doing well.

I know this is not much, but I will write more when I have time.

God bless!

Mik

Friday, March 14, 2008

The hardest part...

...is the waiting...

Everything is packed...

Everything is set...

And now...the wait...


I hate waiting. I am not a very patient person, at times...right now least of all. I was not so stressed the first time. The second time holds a lot more stress...especially as I do not know if it is certain sure that I am going.

Oy....

Makes me sick just thinking on it. I'd rather know now...one way or t'other, I don't much care...

Just...to know...

And so...

The waiting is the hardest part.

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