Urban chic? No, it’s urban ghetto!
There is an unclassified website that displays pictures of the camp’s main facilities. When I arrived, I was amazed that the base did not look anything like the website – I would actually consider the pictures as false advertisement. Sure, the headquarter facilities and compound on the hill are nice and featured on the website. But for most of us, the flatland is quite congested with many connexes – large shipping containers – interspersed between our tents. In addition, the spacing is extremely tight and along with the compressed dirt road, there is a definite “urban ghetto” feel that permeates the camp. Many years ago, this was a French Foreign Legion camp!
Get working!
Right away, I hit the required logistics paperwork: Passenger Manifest, Aircraft Load Plan, Hazard Declarations, Packing Lists, Military Shipping Labels, etc. This is the job that I came here to perform and with just a short timeframe, I was buzzing around like a bee to make it all happen.
Last celebration
That evening, I head out to the on-base cantina to celebrate the last night our entire team will be together at this deployed location. The organic crew will be flying our C-130s back home and depart in the morning. Given that this is an all-service camp, soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen all co-mingle within this outdoor cantina which becomes one boisterous – albeit testosterone filled – atmosphere that is a great outlet for all parties involved.
A call out: I am a member of the San Francisco Renegades Drum and Bugle corps, and this weekend the corps competed in three competitions throughout California . Unfortunately, I had to miss all three shows since I was a half a world away, but the corps did very well scoring a 72.663 in Sunnyvale on Saturday – way to go!