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marinecorpstimes.com

Candelestine , to news in 4-foot-7-inch Marine says peers in boot camp ‘kind of looked up to’ him

I feel like being a smaller target is a huge advantage for a modern rifleman. Until it comes time for a long hike with an 80lb pack or something, that’s probably a lot harder just due to physics. Shorter legs means each mile hiked consumes more energy than a taller marine would.

Salamendacious OP ,
@Salamendacious@lemmy.world avatar

Your right, from the article:

The hikes were tougher. As the lead guide for his series, Laprade led the formation alongside the lanky guide of his platoon, according to the release.

“Little legs with a little body weight, a lot of weight in the pack and a lot of miles in the hikes,” Laprade said. “That was the hardest part for me, the hikes.”

Candelestine , (edited )

Yeah, I saw a vid yesterday by Civ Div, a volunteer fighter with a youtube, who failed to complete his 4 year term in the Marines. One of his major problems being unable to adequately keep up on the long hikes under heavy load.

Got me thinking about it. And lo-and-behold, today an article about another short marine. lol

edit: In the interest of not disrespecting Civ Div, who I admire for how he does good, important work today, I like to think that perhaps the Marine Corps is slowly changing how they integrate new recruits that are particularly short. I wonder if that is the case though.

Regardless, the accomplishments of both short guys are very respectable imho.

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