Woo hoo, I am an Infantry soldier posted to an Infantry battalion. I have earned the right to wear the skippy badge.
I dunno what happened to the second lieutenant from the Cadre Company, maybe they sent him south to a retraining camp. I never did see him again and he was probably glad to see the last of us Nashos.
Sum Wun said the mortar sergeant got married and none of us got an invitation. He also said that he was still married to his other wife, but as I didn't see him again I dunno if this was true.
The 100 guys from the Cadre Company were split up all through the Battalion. I would see them often, “Howsitgoin’ mate?”
“Good mate, yeah. You?”
“Yeah, good.”
“OK, catch ya later mate.”
“Yeah, seeya mate.”
Now you know why they call us dumb grunts, this is about as serious a conversation you can have with a grunt. Oh, I haven’t explained the grunt bit. When carrying a heavy pack through the scrub you are continually ducking and weaving around bushes, trees and especially BLOODY VINES!!! In addition, Infantry never moves on level ground, we are always going uphill. As the pack shifts your body has to compensate, eliciting a ‘grunt’ from your body. We were grunts. We didn’t call ourselves grunts, others did. We wore the name as a badge of honour. Were we dumb? A lot of people thought so.
We were standing around the A Company headquarter building. The NCOs were there with lists calling out for us new guys to join their section. I was expecting a tall bronzed Anzac to be our section commander, a corporal to lead us into battle. I got Davo.
Davo was a veteran of the Vietnam war. He had already served there for 12 months as an Infantry soldier. I guess he knew his shit. He was neither tall nor short, neither fat nor thin, neither brilliant nor stupid. He had one distinguishing feature, he had snow white hair; and if you looked closely enough you could make out his snow white moustache. His ears were quite big as well. Maybe I should call him big ears when he calls out my name to see how he reacts.
I hear him call out “Kavanak.”
Silence.
“Kavanak?”
I step forward and announce myself, “It’s Cavanough, corporal.”
“You’ll do me Knackers.”
And so henceforth I will be known as Knackers. (This is nearly as bad as my nickname at high school, there I was called Nutz!).
“You’ll be number two on the machine gun Knackers.”
Thank goodness for that. The machine gun, I’ll be part of the machine gun group, the firepower of the section. It could have been worse, nobody wants to be number three rifleman, you know, the last guy to get picked from a group when captains of a football team take turns in selecting a player. They always pick the best ones first and leave some until last because they are, well, shitty.
We drew bedding from the Q store. “Sign here,” said Boris. I signed. We were shown to our lines, we knew where they were because of all those early morning greetings we gave them. It was exactly the same design as our previous accommodation. I made the bed and realised I had no bed spread. I reported it to our section 2IC LCPL John S who seemed upset, like it was another problem, “Bloody Nashos!”
We confront Boris who also seems upset, busy and annoyed. He’s big, Russian I think, so I just stand there hiding behind John S. “He didn’t get a bed spread,” said John S.
“Well did he sign for one?” Boris retorted. His face gave the impression he was in pain. He looked at his paperwork, “Cavanough, yes you signed for a bed spread. Where is it?”
“I never got one.”
Silence.
I thought I should tell him a few facts. Listen you big ugly cunt, you didn’t give me time to check the items, I trusted that they were all there, and besides, if 30 blokes checked everything before they signed you’d miss out on lunch, you dumb cunt. But I said nothing.
“Here,” said Boris, throwing a bed spread at me.
Back at our lines most of the platoon was now milling about, helping us new guys make our beds and sort out our lockers and stuff. We were a mixture of Nashos and Regs I was bunking with Digger, Killer and Ian C. Digger was from WA, he was tall and lean. Killer was from Brisbane but recently he was working at a bank on the Gold Coast. For some reason his callup was deferred, so he was older than we were. He was of solid build. Davo told me later that’s why he made him the machine gunner. As I was his number two it meant that Killer and I were together 24/7, we even slept together, but in different beds you understand.
The other guy in the room, Ian C, was also a Nasho but he was two callups before us so he would not serve a full tour of Vietnam because his two years would be up before our tour ended. He lived not far from my home town of Cootamundra, at a little place called Rye Park.
Out platoon sergeant had a nickname, Tojo, but we never called him that. He was a big guy with a big voice, not gruff like a lot of sergeants, but he possessed a very clear speaking voice. He was a confident soldier. He too had served in Vietnam and he was a strong disciplinarian. He was hard but he was fair. I guess you can’t ask for more than that.
All us new guys were interviewed by the platoon commander. I walked in and saluted. He motioned to me to sit down. He initially had me confused with Peter J, another West Australian, a Reg who had been in his platoon for some weeks now. I didn’t think we looked alike, but others said there were some similarities. “How do you feel about going to Vietnam?” he asked.
“Can’t wait to get amongst them, sir.” What else could I say?
“That's what I like to hear. Are there any problems at home that I should be aware of? Problems with wives, pregnant girlfriends, problems with the Police?”
“No sir.”
Pat, the platoon commander, was a man of few words, I don’t recall his giving me a pep talk about the upcoming training and how we must give 100% as would normally be the case. That’s what I would have done, but then I failed officer selection. He wasn’t much older than we were. He was of slight build with ginger coloured hair. He spoke quietly, he seemed very natural. He was not the gung ho type, but his steady manner gained our confidence even though he, like us, had never been tested in battle.

4 comments:
Cav
Your corps training experience was very different from mine. I'd assume that going from rookies straight into a cadre group attached to an Infantry unit would be a better way to go than rookies - corps training - unit posting.
We had a shortened course 1735099 because the Bn had to get a major exercise and a trip to Canungra in before Christmas.
Stay tuned for more.
Cav, you tell a fine tale.
I was wondering if you had spent some time at Canungra.
In the 1950s we knucks* had two weeks' jungle-survival training at that famous SEQ health resort. Jauntily attired in cotton flying suits, we were dumped near O'Reilly's in pairs and given three days to walk back to Canungra via two noon-time check-points. It took us all of 24 hours to do the first 1200 yards on the map to the first check-point.
The exercise was to simulate survival and evasion after bailing out over enemy territory.
Each pair of blokes was given one used parachute, one day's B rations (for one person) and a 1-inch:1-mile topo of the Coomera Gorge.
On the third day, as we got closer to Canungra, the jungle got thinner but more densely populated with "enemy" grunts. My co-survivor and I were captured, interrogated and killed three times that morning.
*Knuck, short for knucklehead: Fighter pilots' equivalent to your grunt badge of honour.
Hi Skeeter, I am writing about Canungra now. In essence it wuz a breeze for us infantry types.
It should be posted in a day or so.
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