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Your Funniest/ Favorite War Stories

You don‘t know the half of it....

YOu NEED a sense of humour in the troops or you‘d loose your mind.

Once I was lucky enough to have a loader who just got off the boat from Germany in 93. He was amazing at making grub on board our Panzer. He‘d make up some french fries in the boiling vessel he‘d brought back with him (specially modified). We‘d be in a hide or leaguer with the grunts and he‘d make up a batch for all of us. When they were done he‘d hit the turret fire bottle alarm...which sounds like the alarm at McD‘s. Next thing you‘d hear is "fries up!" and them being passed to us from the pistol port.

Every jaw in the grunts organization who was in ear shot hit the ground :D

Regards

BTW...he also made homemade doughnuts...don‘t ask me how! ;)
 
Originally posted by Franko:
[qb] You don‘t know the half of it....

turret fire bottle alarm...which sounds like the alarm at McD‘s. [/qb]
hey Franko
I‘ve used the "drivers microwave" to spoof the crunchies a few times myself.

Do you guys still keep a "beer fridge"( NBC filter system)stocked in the tanks?

Slim
 
Nope....Ya want to go to jail? We use it for porn now... :D

Regards
 
I loved winter. The driver would lower the drain plug just behind his position, and reverse a few yards, piling the snow about a foot deep behind his seat- made a perfect spot to stuff a few green grenades for cooling.
 
lol Franko when i said curel i didnt mean it in a bad way lol just the stuff that u guys do to each other just halirus
 
I got a pretty funny story
On my 5th day of CL in D-coy blackdown, we were formed up for breakfast. sgt comes out of the HQ saying: Hey Moran (a guy in my tent), your mother called, she says get up. Oh yeah, and happy birthday."
Just to taunt him, we said "happy birthday, Moran!!!" to him every day for the rest of the summer, lol
Moran, if your out there somewhere, Happy Birthday
 
The Brigade

Shrapnel is the item of the day as our plane trembles and rocks back and forth. Outside the door into the sky it seems like the fourth of July as the skies are lit by the 5th Panzer Division over Carentaen. My parachute strap presses into my chest blocking of blood circulation, the constant sounds of ringing of grenade pins feels likes the constant smashing of rocks against metal. Captain Winters signaled thirty seconds and so began the rustling and moving of people as they stood up and head toward the doors. The sweet sound of the clicking and churning of rifles and brownings roused me as I neared the doors. As time counted down the green light suddenly flickered and off was Pvt. Peon, this meant I was next. Back in basic training they told us airborne to jump outwards away from the planes, unfortunately I had no practice with this and only stepped out before having my entire body feel like there was nothing but my head. The darkness and mist distractufully relaxed me but in the corner of my mind I remember that I was too late already and needed to deploy my chute, the silhouette of the German flack cannon was easily seen as their firing patterns served it to us on a silver platter. As my chute deployed an array of light blinded me and lit my plane up as if it was for sale. Shortly after they began to fire, with such accuracy that the first shell made a hole in the cockpit. The hole was so big that there would be no ground hog that would say no to it. Sgt. Holt and first class pvt.Jason were to two lucky felons to leave last , slowly but surely our plane took to engine fires and like a meteor smacked into a barn in the town below. I snapped out of the gaze as my garrand gave me a fair tug signaling that I was descending fast, I have forgotten to flare. Nearly missing crashing into a oak tree I took a marvelous landing with all the pressure on my buttocks. The tone was quiet and peaceful but something stirred around. There was a crackling of twigs and mild breathing patterns behind me. I gripped my garrand so hard it reminded me of when I hugged my mother the day before launch. Suddenly the silence was broken â Å“thunderâ ?, are words that came from the unknown. Remembering protocol I replied flash and to my relief it was Cpt. Winters, he was a bit shaken himself. â Å“ Have you seen anyone from our stick yetâ ? Cpt. Winters asked. â Å“No sir, Sgt. Holt and Pvt.Jason were the last two I saw, the ought to be around hereâ ?...â ?Do you know where we are sir?â ? I asked rhetorically. â Å“Don't look like Berlin, I'll let you know when I find outâ ?. I laughed for the first time since I chuted, it was a pleasant feeling. The is more sound as I turned to see death. A German was crouching towards our position with a MP 40, ah the days of weapons intelligence class. I gave Cpt.Winters a tap and pointed to him. Cpt. Winters asked me for my knife and fled, I was confused yet hopeful he had a plan the German approached â Å“ello!â ? â Å“straskiestakie!!!!â ?. With his last grunt he stood less than two meters away from my position, I readied my rifle and took aim. Suddenly he made a awkward grunt and dropped smack on his face, behind him stood Cpt Winters knife in hand associated with a lopsided grin.

Plz-Dont laugh im new
 
OK....personal stories please.

Regards
 
read all the posts on previous pages and you‘ll find a common trend..
 
This thread has been personal stories from the start, if you had bothered to read the first post you‘d realise that.
 
Swing and a miss!

Firing from the hip...plain and simple ;)

Regards
 
My uncle Eric is no longer with us, so I‘ll have to tell his story (one of only two he ever told me).

Enlisting on the day war was declared, Uncle Eric was trucked down to the grain storage silo‘s at the harbour in order to draw a uniform (stored there since the First Great Hate). As fate would have it, he happened to get one that fit (sort of).

The fall day was crisp, and he had worn long underwear. Rather than remove it, he had simply rolled up the legs until the long johns couldn‘t be seen below his kilt. Uncle Eric‘s buddy, Geddes Raffin (later a police inspector), was already in the Pipes and Drums and had been "showing him the ropes".

Now, since this was quite early in the War, the troops were still living at home (the Horse Palace wasn‘t ready for them yet), and so at the end of the day they would catch the streetcar.
Geddes jumped on first, and reached back to give Uncle Eric a hand up.

When they arrived at the foot of their street, Geddes said he‘d cut through the alley (he lived one street over) and he‘d meet Uncle Eric first thing the next morning - off he went.

And so, Uncle Eric began to stroll home.

Some street vendors had been selling "swagger sticks" in front of the Armoury, and Uncle Eric didn‘t realise they were only for officers. So, as he swaggered up the street, the self-acclaimed "Saviour Of Highfield" touched his stick to his hat and said ‘hello‘ to one and all.

If there was no one on the front porch or at the window, he would pause and pretend to flick a piece of lint or dust off his uniform until he was satisfied that he‘d been seen.

Finally arriving on his front porch, he turned to survey the street (and give every one one last look at his finery).

From inside the house, Aunt Jessie screamed through the screen door ...

When Geddes had helped Uncle Eric up onto the streetcar, he had also tucked the bottom of Eric‘s kilt into the waist at the back - exposing his hind end (and long underwear) for all to see.

The next morning, Uncle Eric crept out before dawn ...

Dileas Gu Brath
(for Uncle Eric)
 
Heres one For you Engineer Types

My ql3 course was on the Cratering Range In gagetown and me being the keener i am Borrowed My friends gerber So as the Day Went on We Did Cutting Charged Shapped Firing Circuits On a Bailey Bridge And then The Finally

As We Poured The Last Jug of Trigran in (total of 6 in the Hole) And Headed For the Bunker

Just as The Iniater Pressed The Hallowed Button My Gerber was Not In Its Pouch And with a Tremendous Flash My gerber Went back from Where it came

Its Current Location is Somewhere over Gagetown

:salute: :salute:
 
This one'll take us back to Borden. I forget which ex., they tend to all run together after a while. :D

Anyhow, smack between two phases, we were put up in transient barracks near the Lancaster Club in Borden in order to clean up ourselves and our kit before heading to Meaford. The mess we were to eat at was the CFSAOE mess where all the noobs were assigned. After we had gotten all cleaned up and been made presentable again, some of us decided to introduce the RCR to all the â Å“aerospaceâ ? types over lunch. Not the RCR with whom they were already familiar from their training at recruit school... you know, spit-and-polish, always proper, impeccable manners, etc. Boring, right? :)

It was decided through general consensus that we'd go all ranger on 'em and we would find our own food on our way to the mess thereby saving the CF the cost of feeding us. Once a plan had been decided upon, we enthusiastically began our â Å“huntâ ? under the guise of policing the grass around the barracks. Our catch wasn't all that impressive, so it was agreed that everyone would pool their er... resources, and three of our delinquents were selected to represent the pride of the Army. Once inside the mess, we split up into three teams, each with one â Å“ambassadorâ ? and group of observers.

Team one's point man was JB, whom I believe was of Metis descent. JB had the knack of being able to look extremely insane while calmly performing the most mundane task. The thick glasses helped. He had decided on a sandwich approach and so loaded his tray with some buns, butter, mayo, other condiments, but no meat. He approached a table half occupied with some students and asked if the seat he was indicating were taken. With the rest of his team looking on from nearby tables, JB proceeded to meticulously slice open several buns, rejecting a couple of them with a violent oath once they had been cut open and he had looked inside. Then, wrapping them up in napkins and putting them on a plate, he would march them over to the trash where he would, with proper drill pauses between movements, dump them, then stare hard at the trash container for a second or two. There was intense interest from JB's tablemates as he finally accepted a newly sliced bun as â Å“the good bunâ ?. He then proceeded to place the various condiments on the bun in very specific ways until he was satisfied with the results.

You can guess the next part. After preparing the bun, JB then opens a pocket and starts removing earthworms and placing them with exacting care on the bun. Here's where some of the students begin changing tables. In fact, at this point JB is starting to freak some of US out. He ends up alone at a table, eating his earthworm sandwich, empty tables surround him, and whenever any student happens to walk past, JB reaches out, grasps their arm, looks deep into their eyes and says: â Å“It isn't you, either.â ?

Team two, not the winners in my opinon, went for volume over style and simply all sat together at the same table, but in a pretty crowded part of the mess. They corralled all their um... rations in a glass of water and would just pass it around like they would a tray of pickles or something.

Team three went the â Å“we don't get this kind of chow at homeâ ? route. These guys picked their dumbest looking member to take point. That would have been RF. The thing about RF was that if he wanted to be, he could be quite photogenic. Tall, fit, blond, rugged, think of a rough edged Errol Flynn, basically.

But when he was doing his dumb face, he would acquire, well, kind of an â Å“auraâ ? about him as his features went just short of completely slack. His jaw dropped a bit, so when he spoke, he wouldn't complete his soft consonants and the missing teeth only added to the â Å“Gueth how bady tibes I got KO'd ath a bossa!â ? effect.

So he has the spaghetti.

Brings it back to a table way in the rear of the mess, whereupon he produces several members of the aforementioned species lumbricus terrestris (I looked it up :D ) and mixes them in with the bounty generously provided by Her Majesty. He sprinkles a little cheese on top. He then picks up his plate and fork, walks back forward to the steam table, assumes his avatar and waits patiently to stand in front of one of the student cooks. Having engaged the young lad's attention by standing stock still in front of him and holding out his plate at waist level, he then asks:

â Å“C'n I have sub bore beat doodles?

â Å“What?â ? asks private Noob.

â Å“Beat doodles!â ? replies RF.

â Å“Sorry?â ? queries young Noob.

With deliberate care, RF then sticks his fork into the mound on his plate. He twirls the fork a time or two and comes up with a combination of spaghetti and wildlife, holds it out in front of him and carefully pronounces:

â Å“MEAT NOODLES!â ?

... and puts the fork in his mouth.

By this time, Noob's stomach has caught up with what his eyes are looking at and just barely informs his brain in time to wrench his body around quickly enough to avoid losing HIS lunch all over the steam table and only sprayed his colleague standing beside him.

Beating a hasty er... tactical advance to the rear, RF leaves, dumps the contents of the plate, and meets us all exiting the mess, our mission complete.
 
For some reason I just ended up rereading this old thread, and spewing coffee all over my keyboard. It should not have been allowed to die out.
 
Danjanou said:
For some reason I just ended up rereading this old thread, and spewing coffee all over my keyboard. It should not have been allowed to die out.

I call for the official re-enstatement of Watchpig...Hands down the funniest thing I have ever read! :D :salute:

Slim
 
Not so funny but kind of interesting....
My grandfather had been with the militia before the star of WW2. When war was declared his unit became activated for full time service. He was sent to help with the AA batteries in England during the Battle of Britain. Well as soon as they were out of ammo the soldiers would just lie on their backs and fire off some rounds. Well for some reason one night my Grandfather was using a pistol, while a wave of bombers flew overhead. He actually maneged to bring one of them down with his pistol! Now it couldve been someones elses shot but for some reason he was creadited with it. His name was put in the newspaper for it, i have the article some where..... 
 
My grandfather-in-law has an amusing yet cautionary tale of a young private who borrowed his Tommy gun and left the fox hole one night.  The private apparently assigned himself the duty of clearing a house just over the line of several casks of wine that had been found.  Needless to say, he managed to stumble up the berm and back down into the fox hole, lacking one Tommy gun.  His Sargeant (my grandfather-in-law) promptly made the less-then well private go back into the wine cellar of the house and search around the two feet of stagnant water to find the Tommy.
 
Danjanou said:
For some reason I just ended up rereading this old thread, and spewing coffee all over my keyboard. It should not have been allowed to die out.

Agreed Danjanou.......I must have lapsed into a coma for a while....

Someone MUST have a few yarns to tell out there.

Regards
 
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