5
5
0
I'm going to Ft. Leonardwood for 91L, and coming from "'Laxin Jackson" I'm kinda worried about what to expect from Fort "Lost in the Woods", and was wondering if anyone had any experience with my MOS as well. I understand I'm going for training and not necessarily to enjoy myself, but I have no insight on what to bring or really what to expect except that I have heard it's really bad. I think I have only heard 2 good ish reviews. I know Fort Bragg has a whole website that tells incoming soldiers what to bring and what to expect, as in electronic use and stuff like that. Do I need to bring civilian clothes with me? I literally can't hardly find anything online about Ft. Leonardwood and I leave in 5 days upon the conclusion of VBL. Is it like basic or more chill? Will we still write letters and receive mail? Do we stay in bays with 50+ people and do we have phases like in basic? I know everything is different depending on where you go, and I was told that the weather is pretty bad, but when it gets to a certain point PT is done inside. Where I went to basic we got phone calls upon the completion of each phase, and I was told because I'm going to Ft. Leonardwood, with it being a BCT station as well, it wont be much different than basic training was.
Posted 5 y ago
Responses: 6
You will do short inprocess to 43rd ag and from there I do not know. Weather is bi polar as f%&&. Idk how your privileges will be but when I was there their was a lot of prior marine MOS-T's going in as 91L's.
(4)
(0)
SGT Kevin Hughes
"Weather is bipolar - you got to love that as a description and a pun - as there are two poles. LOL Loved it.
(3)
(0)
SSgt (Join to see)
The common saying is, "don't like the weather, give it a couple of hours." Lived in MO all my life (short of active duty in ND). Bi-Polar/Schizophrenic is the best description of our weather...LOL
(2)
(0)
SPC Ted Ronayne
SSG William Jones I'm a new dick to the army. But I've heard stories of the hell that is Polk.
(2)
(0)
SSG William Jones
SPC Ted Ronayne
It was more popularly known as Ft. Puke, Lowsyanna! Near there was a little town known as Diseaseville (Leesville). The drills were all multi-tour Vietnam veterans and believe me, training was much like the Marine training depicted in "Full Metal Jacket". MUCH has changed since then. When I graduated from Drill Sergeant School, we couldn't "stress" the "trainees" nearly as much as was done in the late 60's.
It was more popularly known as Ft. Puke, Lowsyanna! Near there was a little town known as Diseaseville (Leesville). The drills were all multi-tour Vietnam veterans and believe me, training was much like the Marine training depicted in "Full Metal Jacket". MUCH has changed since then. When I graduated from Drill Sergeant School, we couldn't "stress" the "trainees" nearly as much as was done in the late 60's.
(2)
(0)
SPC Ted Ronayne
SSG William Jones yeah I bet. Basic was a real disappointment for me. Too many shitbags got pushed through, and the amount of people who didn't actually care about training or standards (trainees, not the drill Sergeants) really cheapened my basic training experience... And then I got to AIT where it was 100 times worse.
(2)
(0)
SGT Kevin Hughes
I went to Polk and Tiger Land in the Fall of 1970...Good Training, bizarre weather, and my first exposure to scorpions, tarantulas, and Cajun women with knives.
(1)
(0)
SPC (Join to see) Winter hasn't really hit here in MO yet (I'm located in Columbia, about 2 hours north of FLW). Was in the 60s last week. Wind is kicking something fierce today and temps dropped to the 30s this morning. Winter will get her, most likely mid-January/early February. You will be close enough to the Lake of the Ozarks to find yourself in trouble if you don't keep your head on your shoulders once you get liberty to leave base.
(1)
(0)
Read This Next