Sunday Schedules
Just curious....what takes place during boot camp on Sundays....after holiday time ends/ Classes? Drills? Appreciate any info!!!!
Jeff |
I was in bootcamp from December 2012-February 2013.
Holiday routine was from 0700 (or 0800 I can't remember lol) - 1300. During this time recruits are allowed to shine boots, write letters, take "hollywood showers", etc. They also have a WIDE variety of church services you can go to on Sundays. Afterwords, you field day for about an hour. Might do some marching practice. No PT. There really isn't too much that goes on on Sundays. Saturdays and Sundays are also NON-training days. |
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When I said No PT on Sundays, I meant no ORGANIZED PT as in, Freedom Hall or actual, on the POD, In-House PT. I didn't say anything about PTing on Saturdays. The OP asked about SUNDAYS. So I responded keeping in mind that the OP was talking about SUNDAYS. On OUR POD at bootcamp, field day happened as soon as we secured from holiday routine. When I said that there isn't too much that goes on on weekends, I meant that it was more freelance for the RDCs to do whatever. If you're lucky, like myself OBVIOUSLY, you may find yourself in a division that didn't get beat all the time like a lot of other divisions. |
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How often did you get 'Beat' per day and per week? Not just on Sundays, but during any regular week? |
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My division... we only got divisional IT (beat) ONCE. My RDCs usually dropped us individually or just dropped our division leaders. Sometimes we got dropped in groups. Mostly during WTI lol But me as a person, I was dropped once individually for talking while I was on watch about dolphins... IDK lol Compared to other divisions, my division and brother div's NEVER got beat... which is kinda true. Especially compared to other people's experiences. In the 2 months I spent at bootcamp, I can count on 2 hands how many times I got beat and the beatings were usually less than 5 minutes -_- |
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You shouldn't worry anyway though. If you're already in some type of shape, regular PT is a walk in the park to be honest with you. Bootcamp isn't as intense as you think it is. Besides your live fire, firefighting, etc., all it is is... A lot of folding. A lot of cleaning. Some academic classes. Drill practice. 1 hour of organized PT. Chow. Sleep. And the occasional IT session (again depending on your RDCs). Super easy. And they stopped doing 8-counts a little before I got to bootcamp. When I went they were doing 10-counts. |
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By the way, the 10 counts just add an extra push up, right? How many of them do they have you do? |
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PT in bootcamp... if you can work yourself up to a 20 minute sustained run, you'll be okay! 10 counts (start standing up): 1. Get down on your hands. 2. Jump back into the push up position. 3. Jump to the left. 4. Center (pushup position) 5. Jump to the right. 6. Center 7 & 8. Push up. Down is 7. Up is 8. 9. Jump back in. 10. Stand up. We usually did like 20 of these. If you've done Insanity, think Ski Abs mixed with a regular Burpee. |
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Right now I'm jogging a two mile track around the neighborhood. I don't think it takes me 20 min to do it thought. I may need to increase the distance.. but I am doing it every day. This may be a dumb question, but what happens if they tell you do 40 push ups and you can only do 30.. or they tell you to hold something for a minute and you can't do it... you fatigue out. Do they really get on you hard for stuff like that? I just don't wanna go there and be the guy that can't do everything they tell you when everyone else can. |
At ocs (not sure if it's the same at ROTC), they're limited to 10 minutes per hour. That 10 minutes can be in addition to regular PT, and can be broken up into shorter sessions. With my class, the rarely did the full 10 minutes, more often it was short and intense.
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They're really good at knowing when you have legitimately maxed out and when you are giving up on yourself.
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No, not really. They know people get tired. Bootcamp is a mind game. You **** up sometimes. Whats the worst that can happen? Getting dropped or getting yelled at. If you get tired while they drop you, once again, whats the worst that can happen? Get dropped and yelled at some more? Believe it or not, your RDCs wanna see you succeed. They won't let you fall behind unless they see you're not really trying. I promise you, you won't be in a situation where everyone can succeed physically while you can't. Even the strongest people have a breaking point. Trust me, all you will hurt together lol The people that don't succeed physically are the ones that quit during the sustained runs, or cheat during in-house PT when your RDC has their back turned. Don't overthink it. I did a butt ton of research on bootcamp before I went. I got there and was like ... "oh... so... THIS is it?!" Super easy! |
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I just wanna make sure I can physically handle boot camp before I head there and make a fool out of myself. |
Yeah, IT was limited to 10 minutes per hour.
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Yeah me too! I prefer to know what I'm getting myself into as well. I'm sure you'll be fine though! Especially since you're PTing like you are. As long as you're careful not to overwork yourself when you PT, bootcamp will be a breeze for you!
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Here's my workouts which seem to be a little too much lately: Squats (3 sets of 20 w/45 lb bar) Walking Lunges (3 Sets - 10 each leg) Calf raises (3 sets of 50) 4-count jumping jacks (3 sets of 20) Crunches (Regular + Revers w/leg raise hold for 30 sec. at the end of each) Flutter kicks(3 sets of 20 count) Planks (3 sets w/a 1 minute hold) Supermans(3 sets w/a 1 min. hold) Push ups(3 sets of 20) 8 count bodybuilders (2 sets of 15) Mountain climbers (2 sets of 20) So this is way more than what I'll face in PT or getting ITd? Because doing this twice a day has both of my knees hurting. The rest of my body seems ok with it. I guess I just need to know I won't be doing this much on a daily basis. |
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My coach said he would tell the people that thought they couldn't run a few sustained miles (usually the sprinters) that you can't run slow enough doing long distance lol. I had never really run more than a mile before my first year of doing track last year (at first I was a sprinter but moved over to long distance after I enlisted) and I did my first 3 miles in 25 minutes barely sucking air at the end (I was running with my track coach because I was new)--it was hard during the actual course, running uphill and what not but at the end I thought I could have run another mile or two.
I guess what I'm trying to say is try running slow(er) at first and working your way up. A 7 mph pace is a good pace to run (8:34/mile). |
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We once had divisional IT for 6 hours after Holiday routine on Sunday. It was brutal. But only happened like that once.
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