Thanks for watching Team! Your time can’t be replaced, and I’m *STOKED* that you chose to spend some of it here. If you want to *STAY* *STOKED* - subscribe & click the notification bell. Make sure you leave a comment to share your thoughts, questions, or experiences so we can master our craft. You can also find me on: Website: www.Stokermatic.com Facebook: facebook.com/groups/391967792881354/?ref=share Instagram instagram.com/stokercraft/ Amazon www.amazon.com/shop/stokermatic
I hope those watching and interested in the topic noticed a few things in this video. #1. How quiet and deliberate Stoker moves through the forest. He isnt rushing. He isnt just placing his feet one in front of the another. He is selecting where he places his feet with deliberate action. He is quiet, methodical and deliberate in his movements. #2. Stoker stops, listens and observes his surroundings. This is the hardest thing to teach people is to stop, listen and observe. #3. His kit makes no noise. He has every strap or buckle taped and silenced. #4. Last but not least, as a Medic, I am proud to see him demonstrating the need to ALWAYS keep your feet as dry as possible. Change your damm socks!! I've seen the toughest ODA guys taken out of the fight because they decided to push through and not change their socks. This is great stuff and is a perfect tribute to those who came before us that made the ultimate sacrifice. Stay Stoked!
I've worked construction for months on end, knee deep in water. Never dried my boots, never changed my socks, never had foot issues. What are the foot issues you've encountered? Not talking smack...genuinely interested.
@@WellDressedCaveman If you havent had a 75 pound rucksack on your back and humped 20 miles in 120 degree temperatures then you would have no clue. Working construction and being in water for a couple of hours is totally not the same. It's the walking, sweating and friction of your boots rubbing on your skin that causes the issues.
@@WellDressedCavemanthe difference is that after work you take a shower and dry your feet and let them air out for the rest of the night or troops do not have that luxury. I hike a lot with boy scouts. On the first day everyone is fine. By the second night we can tell by how they are walking who slept with their old socks on and wore them again. Of course some people don't have issues. I get athletes foot very often and that's with proper foot hygiene. Other people never get it. One other note. $200 work boots are very comfortable. Military issue boots, not so much.
Way to much noise stepped on to many sticks, he lays his weapon completely on ground, he struggled making to much noise to remove items from Molly, he drops heavy on knees not checking for thorns or sticks or rocks as real full time larps will do cuz we know one small wound can fester n make u lame as privet contractor n larp marksman / sniper my longest was 4mo out, he carried way to much gear did nothing to break up his outline n often faced direct sun n stepped right to top or ridge instead of ease up n slow recon, b4 lifting up, I get wat he was trying to get across n I do thank him for that n I did in many ways bring back 1986 to 2001 n reminds me that I survived where others died !!
Well done Bill!! 😊 For those who don't know me, I served with the 2nd Ranger Battalion. At the formation of 1/75 and 2/75 in 1974, our leaders were pulled from LRRP/Ranger units out of Vietnam. As a young private, they were my mentors and heros, they taught us a lot! Our initial training and missions reflected the operations that they conducted in RVN (we didn't begin counterterrorism and airport takedown raid operations until the late 1970s).
I remember waaay back seeing the really old salty NCOs wearing faded summer BDUs with the “fat boy tabs” on the waist (my favorite top, gave that squared away taper!) some almost so faded that were almost cook whites…lol. Ah, the memories.
Thank you for your service. I was a grunt. 1st Infantry. You're still around, proves that we don't die easily! I hope you're around for the next 37 years! And we'll all miss you when you go.
Great Short Film and Dedication. I have an uncle who did this. He spent 12 years in Nam. Went across the border and was listed MIA, Presumed Dead for 3 years, but was never really missing.
BDUs and old school ALICE gear. I still have mine from the 80s. The belt, Y harness and the associated gear are always in my vehicle. The large ALICE pack is my get home bag for road trips. Nothing wrong with the old stuff. As for the apparel, my jungle boots and hat still fit. I stayed old school with an A4 with iron sights. Another great vid Top.
If you're open to it, swap the Alice pack for a mystery ranch one or just get another pack! I love my Alice also, but the mystery ranch allows you to stow your gear along the length of your body, saving your spine a lot of grief for heavy load out. God bless and stay vigilant!
@@tntshuffle-9799 I wholeheartedly concur! My MR 3DAP is light years more comfortable than my old ALICE pack with frame, which I still have, by the way! 😊
I traded my Alice in for a Kelty 65 liter. Along with a Hill People chest rig, and swapped out a couple other pieces of kit. My get home bag went from 75 pounds to 35 pounds. Being 47 and ex 82nd I'm not humping 19 year old weight anymore. I can still get it done, just have to modify the kit a little.
@John Rodriguez: USMC and US Army Veteran 🇺🇸 The key right now, is to give each other good, solid information about anything that can help us function. The things happening in our country and in the world right now are highly alarming. This current govt is doing absolutely nothing to prepare our people for what might be coming. I personally think this is on purpose. So we need to communicate and help each other like we are now, before the ability to do so is taken away! God bless brother! God bless all my fellow vets out there who see what's coming!
@@kevinboock7143 Loosen the lid while purifying your water and shake a little of the decontaminated from inside the canteen between the lid and threads of the canteen so you don't get the sh*ts from nasty water left over in the threads of the canteen.
Nothing beats the good old medium or large ruck's or the LBE. I still have my issued old school items and yes they are set up just as I used them when I was in the ARMY.
Really great job. One of my dad's good friends was a LRRP in Vietnam; 2 tours. My maternal grandpa did long range jungle warfare in Burma in WWII. They had mules to carry their really heavy gear, but carried everything else on their back and got resupplied by parachute drop.
Winter weight BDU's, old school large Alice pack, LBE and accessories... living it! It was an honor to have watched this dedicated video! R.I.P. to all military who didn't come home safe. Be safe and stay stoked!
Excellent! Reminds me of my days in the ealry 80's as a young soldier stationed at Ft. Bragg. While on deployment with M-203 and humping a ALICE pack (large), bed roll, 2 qt canteen, E-tool, ranger beads, OG-107 fatigues, jungle boots, boonie hat, PRC radio w/secure gear (as noted). What a time and a place to grow up and be a part of a team, deployed overseas, Hondo Ops - Ahuas Tara. This video portrayed mission profile and awoke my senses to a time when time itself slows down and all focus is on mission and dedication, despite the misery of deployment...oh to be young again, if only. Airborne!
My appreciation for the military, as a lifelong civilian, continues to grow every day. Thank you for the information and insights into the nuances of the fieldcraft and survival tactics of our military. And thank you for the excellent short film!! God Save America!🇺🇸
Nice to see LRPs/LRRPs getting some well deserved attention. They were more bad ass and effective in Vietnam than SEALs , MACV-SOG or any other teams operating at the time. They deserve far more notoriety.
I remember using the tabs during the E&E portion of SERE school with the Brits (ILRRPS) while stationed in Vicenza late 80s. My buddy and I ended up breaking into a pump station and filling up with clean water. Totally worth it! 😉
Outstanding!!! That was really well done brother, not to be cringey but I have to give that a big HOOAH-- really awesome dedication, until they're all brought home.
Nothing cringey about Hooah. It meant something back in the old days of LIC doctrine, light-fighter and Airborne dominance in the military when the majority of the elite guys were in the conventional force. But then JSOC came along and created the tier mindset and things have been weird ever since.
You should always put the cotton back in the iodine bottle to protect the remaining tablets and wait for 10 minutes before rinsing the threads, rinsing the treads right away just rinses them with possibly contaminated water.
Great video. First, Excellent editing and camera work. and second seeing what you carry and how you use it without a sales pitch, like others, is awesome. Off to see your other videos.
This is beyond awesome! I just discovered your channel and immediately subscribed. Just a thought on walking across the river, we always carry a clean pair of socks if it is even a potential possibility of an overnighter. Change out wet socks, apply talc, keep on truckin'. Thanks again for such a great video.
Stoker! On a scale of 1-10 this video is a solid 12! Great video I know a lot of work went into making this. I enjoyed every minute of it. Heavy duty stuff with the dedication at the end. Thanks for the video.
Carrying you sleeping pad horizontal at the top of the pack breaks your silhouette camouflage. It would be better to strap it vertically on a side or under.
I had to comment again, this video detailed much of what I did during much of my early years in the Army. Thanks so much for this, it really means alot.
Awesome video! On a scale of 1-10, this rate's a solid 12+! Some of my favorite parts are compass usage (Land Nav!) The end dedication memorials are very good for this type of video.
This is great! I always thought it would be cool to do a short film like this. You really nailed everything from tucking in the bootlaces to waiting for the water cleaning tabs to work their magic. Even field stripping the MREs. All very accurate sincerely, Former Grunt.
I love it...got the old LBE gear...and the old leather ' leg ' boots... old Kabar fighting knife with leather sheath...brings back memories for sure...
Might want to camo those white hands also. We did it the NAM as hand movement without camo can be spotted easy in the jungle and the low light environment you were in.
Dam, those old BDU's. Thick material woodland and Hot. We were all down when the Army replaced our jungle fatigues. Jungle boots are a must when doing water crossing if at all possible. I always kept my cami pants bloused, not so much for ticks and chiggers but spiders were my concern. Well done, brought back many memories of long Hot nights hitting the silk at 02::00 on Ft. Bragg... 78/82 Airborne
Stoker, that was awesome, really enjoyed it. In the process of working out, getting my small backpack together. I do have a Eberlestock Operator backpack but that's a big one. Be a while before I can carry that one loaded, whew!
First Semper Fi brother. A few criticism I’ll assume your out in the open for filming purposes. Never get your feet/ boots wet if you can help it. Water locations are always places to be compromised. Fire in a non-permissive is a no go. If your going to stop find a defense position. Paint your rifle it sticks out. Ditch the black gloves. Great video production. Subbed.
Web gear, plastic canteens, ames etool, BDU's, kabar, your dating yourself Top, I still use the same stuff it's good to see non mall ninja stuff in use.
Know your in the Northwest Salal sword fern,Douglas fir,Oregon Grape.I know many of us get it. and are ready. old and ready RVN 68 &69. God Bless thanks for your hard Work !!!
Okay Mr stocker, I am not even going to finish this one before I comment. I see a big problem with this one.... You didn't invite me along for all the fun. Great job and I am only half way though!! Edit: fair well and following seas shipmates.
Seems like a lot of gear for an LRRP (long range reconnaissance patrol), especially the sleeping bag and ground pad! One of my DIs was a Marine Recon and he only carried a canteen (with cover), a Kabar knife, a 1911 pistol, a map, and two frag grenades. Light and fast and quiet, radios were heavy and unreliable, a .45 is a poor match for an AK in a fire fight and he was there to recon not fight; that's what the knife was for if needed! Most LRRPs were two man teams, (you have to sleep sometime) but circumstances, doctrine and personnel availability no doubt dictated that! Liked the video, especially the attention to your surrounding, too many people don't see the forest for the trees and never see any wildlife because they're in too much of a hurry and thus make too much noise! I'll bet this man bow hunts!
This was beautifully done. Good tick wrap on your socks! Good alignment with background (mostly vertical). Great minimal sky-lighting, and staying on the Military crest. Is there something that camo's the hole in a rolled sleeping pad. That stuck out. The rest worked really well. Might be good to add authentication to your radio comms, that keeps asshole spooks like me from running intrusion ops on you. BTW My LRRP classmates thank you for OP Chesty.
Ya know... my dad was a Marine in Nam, '69. He carried a two pocket canvas arvn ruck with one pair of cammies in it. His 2nd pair of socks carried cans of C rats drapped on the outside (to wash out socks when it rained), a poncho and any poggie bait and spare ammo he could muster. He said they spent days, sometimes weeks in the jungle like this. They cooked by lighting c4 under a helmet (steel pot) or canteen cup... he said it was the most simple time of his life. Not easy, but "simple".
Yeah old school right down to the rifle sling unattached to the body. And yet mixed with some newer school weapons mounted thermal. Almost as sexy as removing ticks with your teeth. Carry on top, carry on.
Thanks for watching Team! Your time can’t be replaced, and I’m *STOKED* that you chose to spend some of it here.
If you want to *STAY* *STOKED* - subscribe & click the notification bell. Make sure you leave a comment to share your thoughts, questions, or experiences so we can master our craft.
You can also find me on:
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Thank you for this invaluable information! It's going to come in VERY handy when SHTF really soon
Amen!!🇺🇸
ทหารที่อยู่ในป่าในสนามรบพวกเขาจะได้รับยาม้าแจกให้คนละขวดเอาใส่น้ำดื่มเพื่อให้ร่างกายแข็งแร็งแกร่งไม่เหนื่อยร้าใจถึงนิยมมากสงครามครั้งที่โลกครั้งที่สอง
Ŗ eden🎉 tx🎉@@มูซามูซา-ว1ธ
I hope those watching and interested in the topic noticed a few things in this video. #1. How quiet and deliberate Stoker moves through the forest. He isnt rushing. He isnt just placing his feet one in front of the another. He is selecting where he places his feet with deliberate action. He is quiet, methodical and deliberate in his movements. #2. Stoker stops, listens and observes his surroundings. This is the hardest thing to teach people is to stop, listen and observe. #3. His kit makes no noise. He has every strap or buckle taped and silenced. #4. Last but not least, as a Medic, I am proud to see him demonstrating the need to ALWAYS keep your feet as dry as possible. Change your damm socks!! I've seen the toughest ODA guys taken out of the fight because they decided to push through and not change their socks.
This is great stuff and is a perfect tribute to those who came before us that made the ultimate sacrifice. Stay Stoked!
I've worked construction for months on end, knee deep in water. Never dried my boots, never changed my socks, never had foot issues. What are the foot issues you've encountered? Not talking smack...genuinely interested.
@@WellDressedCaveman If you havent had a 75 pound rucksack on your back and humped 20 miles in 120 degree temperatures then you would have no clue. Working construction and being in water for a couple of hours is totally not the same. It's the walking, sweating and friction of your boots rubbing on your skin that causes the issues.
@Editor couple hours...months of working 12-14 hrs a day, knee deep in water and mud.
@@WellDressedCavemanthe difference is that after work you take a shower and dry your feet and let them air out for the rest of the night or troops do not have that luxury. I hike a lot with boy scouts. On the first day everyone is fine. By the second night we can tell by how they are walking who slept with their old socks on and wore them again.
Of course some people don't have issues. I get athletes foot very often and that's with proper foot hygiene. Other people never get it.
One other note. $200 work boots are very comfortable. Military issue boots, not so much.
Way to much noise stepped on to many sticks, he lays his weapon completely on ground, he struggled making to much noise to remove items from Molly, he drops heavy on knees not checking for thorns or sticks or rocks as real full time larps will do cuz we know one small wound can fester n make u lame as privet contractor n larp marksman / sniper my longest was 4mo out, he carried way to much gear did nothing to break up his outline n often faced direct sun n stepped right to top or ridge instead of ease up n slow recon, b4 lifting up,
I get wat he was trying to get across n I do thank him for that n I did in many ways bring back 1986 to 2001 n reminds me that I survived where others died !!
Well done Bill!! 😊
For those who don't know me, I served with the 2nd Ranger Battalion.
At the formation of 1/75 and 2/75 in 1974, our leaders were pulled from LRRP/Ranger units out of Vietnam.
As a young private, they were my mentors and heros, they taught us a lot!
Our initial training and missions reflected the operations that they conducted in RVN (we didn't begin counterterrorism and airport takedown raid operations until the late 1970s).
🫡
Wow, you’ve been sniffing your own farts since 1974? Your exwife had the right idea cutting you loose.
B co, 1bn/75, OEF. I've been out a decade now. Do you ever stop missing it?
God Bless all the men and women who chose the patriotic path,i never served and regret it to this day thankyou,all of you
Fantastic brother! That faded woodland was on point. Semper Fi!
🇺🇸🇺🇸
Woodland’s forever!!! Man I miss my BDUs!
I remember waaay back seeing the really old salty NCOs wearing faded summer BDUs with the “fat boy tabs” on the waist (my favorite top, gave that squared away taper!) some almost so faded that were almost cook whites…lol. Ah, the memories.
Faded woodlands stick out like a sore thumb under NVG’s.
@@bigchief4044 oh for sure… these were worn in garrison, not in the field.
As a 70 year old grunt I want to thank you Top for your videos. I really enjoy them.
🫡
Thank you for your service. I was a grunt. 1st Infantry. You're still around, proves that we don't die easily! I hope you're around for the next 37 years! And we'll all miss you when you go.
70 year old Commo Lima Charlie
Great Short Film and Dedication. I have an uncle who did this. He spent 12 years in Nam. Went across the border and was listed MIA, Presumed Dead for 3 years, but was never really missing.
BDUs and old school ALICE gear. I still have mine from the 80s. The belt, Y harness and the associated gear are always in my vehicle. The large ALICE pack is my get home bag for road trips. Nothing wrong with the old stuff. As for the apparel, my jungle boots and hat still fit. I stayed old school with an A4 with iron sights. Another great vid Top.
If you're open to it, swap the Alice pack for a mystery ranch one or just get another pack! I love my Alice also, but the mystery ranch allows you to stow your gear along the length of your body, saving your spine a lot of grief for heavy load out. God bless and stay vigilant!
@@tntshuffle-9799 I wholeheartedly concur! My MR 3DAP is light years more comfortable than my old ALICE pack with frame, which I still have, by the way! 😊
I traded my Alice in for a Kelty 65 liter. Along with a Hill People chest rig, and swapped out a couple other pieces of kit. My get home bag went from 75 pounds to 35 pounds. Being 47 and ex 82nd I'm not humping 19 year old weight anymore. I can still get it done, just have to modify the kit a little.
@PreparedMindStrongSpirit Do what you can to save your spine now brother!
@John Rodriguez: USMC and US Army Veteran 🇺🇸 The key right now, is to give each other good, solid information about anything that can help us function. The things happening in our country and in the world right now are highly alarming. This current govt is doing absolutely nothing to prepare our people for what might be coming. I personally think this is on purpose. So we need to communicate and help each other like we are now, before the ability to do so is taken away! God bless brother! God bless all my fellow vets out there who see what's coming!
Nice to see someone do the tabs/canteen threads the right way!
What is the right way? Civilian here.
@@kevinboock7143 Loosen the lid while purifying your water and shake a little of the decontaminated from inside the canteen between the lid and threads of the canteen so you don't get the sh*ts from nasty water left over in the threads of the canteen.
Love The PA5x36 Gen3 ACSS With The AURORA Reticle Especially Due To The Higher Wind Holds! 😎
Man this is out-freaking standing dude!
Randy’s gagging on that vet-bro dick again
Awesome short film. Would love to see one with a full LRRP team working together. The attention to detail goes above most. Well done.
🥃
Very well done. Brought back memories.
SALUTE
to those who are no longer with us.
Nothing beats the good old medium or large ruck's or the LBE. I still have my issued old school items and yes they are set up just as I used them when I was in the ARMY.
Really great job. One of my dad's good friends was a LRRP in Vietnam; 2 tours.
My maternal grandpa did long range jungle warfare in Burma in WWII. They had mules to carry their really heavy gear, but carried everything else on their back and got resupplied by parachute drop.
Those Ol Alice Packs are the Ak 47s of Rucksacks. Still around and will continue to be.
OOORAH! Like a trip down memory lane! Extremely well done
Winter weight BDU's, old school large Alice pack, LBE and accessories... living it! It was an honor to have watched this dedicated video! R.I.P. to all military who didn't come home safe. Be safe and stay stoked!
🇺🇸🥃🇺🇸
I did not realize until the end, this video was a dedication. That makes it even better.
Semper Fi Brother. You took me back, nothing like being out in the field. Great video.
Wow that was so good I'm going to have to watch it a second time, who needs Netflix?
Cool video brother. I was on a LRS team. Best guys I ever got to work with.
I love how well your camo works in that biome: it's so different from where I'm at!
Excellent! Reminds me of my days in the ealry 80's as a young soldier stationed at Ft. Bragg. While on deployment with M-203 and humping a ALICE pack (large), bed roll, 2 qt canteen, E-tool, ranger beads, OG-107 fatigues, jungle boots, boonie hat, PRC radio w/secure gear (as noted).
What a time and a place to grow up and be a part of a team, deployed overseas, Hondo Ops - Ahuas Tara.
This video portrayed mission profile and awoke my senses to a time when time itself slows down and all focus is on mission and dedication, despite the misery of deployment...oh to be young again, if only. Airborne!
My appreciation for the military, as a lifelong civilian, continues to grow every day. Thank you for the information and insights into the nuances of the fieldcraft and survival tactics of our military. And thank you for the excellent short film!!
God Save America!🇺🇸
God ain’t gunna do it. We have to.
GOD. ALMIGHTY. KAVEEEER 🙏🙏
Nice to see LRPs/LRRPs getting some well deserved attention. They were more bad ass and effective in Vietnam than SEALs , MACV-SOG or any other teams operating at the time. They deserve far more notoriety.
I remember using the tabs during the E&E portion of SERE school with the Brits (ILRRPS) while stationed in Vicenza late 80s. My buddy and I ended up breaking into a pump station and filling up with clean water. Totally worth it! 😉
Still got it, Top. This was a great patrolling / skills video and a wonderful dedication to great men.
I absolutely lo ed the blending of old school gear and craft with the newer style of recon. Great job and keep them coming!
Old school. Love it. Semper fi
Excellent. Watched it twice so far. Dedication to the fallen made it even better. Thank you brother.
🫡
Brother, this is OUTSTANDING!!!! Thanks for posting!!!
Solid work Stoker! Enjoyed every minute of this! Inspirational!
Thank You For Sharing ! Thank You Brave Hero’s For Serving Our Country !! GOD Bless The USA !
Outstanding!!! That was really well done brother, not to be cringey but I have to give that a big HOOAH-- really awesome dedication, until they're all brought home.
🫡
Nothing cringey about Hooah. It meant something back in the old days of LIC doctrine, light-fighter and Airborne dominance in the military when the majority of the elite guys were in the conventional force. But then JSOC came along and created the tier mindset and things have been weird ever since.
@@GhostRanger5060 True.
You should always put the cotton back in the iodine bottle to protect the remaining tablets and wait for 10 minutes before rinsing the threads, rinsing the treads right away just rinses them with possibly contaminated water.
Would you want to watch a bottle of water for 10 minutes on UA-cam?
@@praharin I just don't want it to mislead someone into using the tablets incorrectly.
KEEP WONDERING IF I AM TOO OLD TO KEEP UP WITH THE SKILLS .... well done sir
Top Notch, Thank you for sharing.
Great video. First, Excellent editing and camera work. and second seeing what you carry and how you use it without a sales pitch, like others, is awesome. Off to see your other videos.
This is beyond awesome! I just discovered your channel and immediately subscribed. Just a thought on walking across the river, we always carry a clean pair of socks if it is even a potential possibility of an overnighter. Change out wet socks, apply talc, keep on truckin'.
Thanks again for such a great video.
Thank you for the trip down memory lane brother
This film was over for me when I saw the pretty watch reflect light.
Which way was my watch turned?
Thank you... yall are a special breed of human.
Well as a Submariner in the '80s- early '90s, I am out of place but am learning from my MAG community and you. Thanks.
Stoker! On a scale of 1-10 this video is a solid 12! Great video I know a lot of work went into making this. I enjoyed every minute of it.
Heavy duty stuff with the dedication at the end. Thanks for the video.
Appreciate that!
Love the details!.... and Loved when he used SALUTE!! Brought back memories!!!!
🫡
Lol, I was thinking the same thing, Started looking for my SMLM card…. Lol. Awesome video, top notch…
Thanks for taking the time to make this. 🇺🇸
🇺🇸🥃🇺🇸
Your gear and camo look great, would love a breakdown!
Wednesday!
That Alice pack is lasting forever and a day ⌛️❤
They all start to smell like vomit after the rubber coatings in them start to break down!
Carrying you sleeping pad horizontal at the top of the pack breaks your silhouette camouflage. It would be better to strap it vertically on a side or under.
I had to comment again, this video detailed much of what I did during much of my early years in the Army. Thanks so much for this, it really means alot.
🥃
Great video. We need more. Great job. God bless. From Glenn CATT in Massachusetts.
Thanks!
@@STOKERMATIC you are welcome. God bless. From Glenn CATT in Massachusetts.
Another home run by the Stokerman...well done...well done indeed
Awesome video! On a scale of 1-10, this rate's a solid 12+! Some of my favorite parts are compass usage (Land Nav!) The end dedication memorials are very good for this type of video.
Truly outstanding! Epic 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Ahhhhh... Professionals........ Warms the heart..
That was a lot of work. Well done.
Thanks
This is great! I always thought it would be cool to do a short film like this. You really nailed everything from tucking in the bootlaces to waiting for the water cleaning tabs to work their magic. Even field stripping the MREs. All very accurate
sincerely,
Former Grunt.
I love it...got the old LBE gear...and the old leather ' leg ' boots... old Kabar fighting knife with leather sheath...brings back memories for sure...
EXCELLENT film!!! Great example of RECCE. Part 2?..
It’s cooking, but may be a while.
Thanks! The effort was obvious.
Brother, I’m humbled. 🫡
Great video and a wonderful tribute. Thanks Top
Nate
Always check your compass around Roswell. Very enjoyable video, thank you! (edit: typo).
Light, noise disapline until you are back across the FFL and the mission is a complete soldier. 😂
Awesome video! Maybe one day the Army will bring back LRS Companies.
They've done away with Pathfinders.
Might want to camo those white hands also. We did it the NAM as hand movement without camo can be spotted easy in the jungle and the low light environment you were in.
Wouldn't that degrade his ability to communicate with hand signals?
Dam, those old BDU's. Thick material woodland and Hot. We were all down when the Army replaced our jungle fatigues. Jungle boots are a must when doing water crossing if at all possible. I always kept my cami pants bloused, not so much for ticks and chiggers but spiders were my concern. Well done, brought back many memories of long Hot nights hitting the silk at 02::00 on Ft. Bragg... 78/82 Airborne
Stoker, that was awesome, really enjoyed it.
In the process of working out, getting my small backpack together.
I do have a Eberlestock Operator backpack but that's a big one. Be a while before I can carry that one loaded, whew!
First Semper Fi brother. A few criticism I’ll assume your out in the open for filming purposes. Never get your feet/ boots wet if you can help it. Water locations are always places to be compromised. Fire in a non-permissive is a no go. If your going to stop find a defense position. Paint your rifle it sticks out. Ditch the black gloves. Great video production. Subbed.
Great job, enjoyed the SALUTE report, take me back to Panama.
EXCELLENCE!! Enjoyed every second of this!
Served w 1st and 3rd Recon 74-78. frigging outstanding! thanks for all u do!
🫡
Beautiful! Thank you!
Nice by the book.. It was actually soothing to the soul to watch. Great job!
Hell yeah, the video I have been waiting for.
🥃
🥃 oh, and i spotted him 5 times, by the way.
I know you put a lot into this and I like to see more! Cool video
Web gear, plastic canteens, ames etool, BDU's, kabar, your dating yourself Top, I still use the same stuff it's good to see non mall ninja stuff in use.
Way to go! Pure motivation and I thank you sir!
I really like this man. Watched the whole way.
Love the old school Alice gear, I got mine.
Outstanding job. Great work, keep it up.
Know your in the Northwest Salal sword fern,Douglas fir,Oregon Grape.I know many of us get it. and are ready. old and ready RVN 68 &69. God Bless thanks for your hard Work !!!
Okay Mr stocker, I am not even going to finish this one before I comment. I see a big problem with this one.... You didn't invite me along for all the fun. Great job and I am only half way though!!
Edit: fair well and following seas shipmates.
Take care of your feet boys. Crocs are also good for crossing rivers, so you can keep dry what needs to be dry. Just sharing.
Well done Stoker. What a great tribute.
🇺🇸🫡🇺🇸
Let's attach a little foliage to that pack too... Especially to the straps holding that smooth eye sore of an iso mat. Ten more pushups mister! ❤
I am watching again. Top notch attention to detail.
Appreciate that!
This took me back to simpler times. Reworked my chest rig off this.
That was awesome! Great job🇺🇸💪🏼🤙🏼
Seems like a lot of gear for an LRRP (long range reconnaissance patrol), especially the sleeping bag and ground pad! One of my DIs was a Marine Recon and he only carried a canteen (with cover), a Kabar knife, a 1911 pistol, a map, and two frag grenades. Light and fast and quiet, radios were heavy and unreliable, a .45 is a poor match for an AK in a fire fight and he was there to recon not fight; that's what the knife was for if needed! Most LRRPs were two man teams, (you have to sleep sometime) but circumstances, doctrine and personnel availability no doubt dictated that! Liked the video, especially the attention to your surrounding, too many people don't see the forest for the trees and never see any wildlife because they're in too much of a hurry and thus make too much noise! I'll bet this man bow hunts!
love the old school gear all the way down to the K-bar ooh rah
Great job 👊
This was beautifully done. Good tick wrap on your socks! Good alignment with background (mostly vertical). Great minimal sky-lighting, and staying on the Military crest. Is there something that camo's the hole in a rolled sleeping pad. That stuck out. The rest worked really well. Might be good to add authentication to your radio comms, that keeps asshole spooks like me from running intrusion ops on you. BTW My LRRP classmates thank you for OP Chesty.
Agree on the sleeping pad
@@owps663 Netting!
Using a 66 mm law will stuff that hole 😂👍👍🤣
Now THAT'S squared away!
Looks like lewis good memories there. Kinda miss it. spent 2 years at lewis 2/1inf 3rd BDE go devils 9th ID thanks great vid
Ya know... my dad was a Marine in Nam, '69. He carried a two pocket canvas arvn ruck with one pair of cammies in it. His 2nd pair of socks carried cans of C rats drapped on the outside (to wash out socks when it rained), a poncho and any poggie bait and spare ammo he could muster. He said they spent days, sometimes weeks in the jungle like this. They cooked by lighting c4 under a helmet (steel pot) or canteen cup... he said it was the most simple time of his life. Not easy, but "simple".
Yeah old school right down to the rifle sling unattached to the body. And yet mixed with some newer school weapons mounted thermal. Almost as sexy as removing ticks with your teeth. Carry on top, carry on.
Outstanding video!
Damn if I didn’t enjoy the heck out of that! Thanks Bill!
The MIA hits hard in the heart