I'm feeling way better- back to my "old" self now! But, this stomach flu is running through the FOB and just when you least expect it, you go down. We've got some folks on travel and got sick while on travel. That's got to be the worst - living out of a rucksack, in a room that has cots in it, very little air conditioning....just want to crawl into a ball and lay down. It's the worst feeling and my heart goes out to those traveling when this hits.
The weather here reminds me of Virginia Beach a few years ago. We went from a winter to a full summer - skipped spring. Well, it appears to have been the same here. I know there was a sloght spring, but it didn't last long. It's cool inthe morning and nights, but the temps scream in the red during the day. Dehydration is rough and those that are sick are having a hell of a time with drinking water. We've got pallets of bottled water spread around the FOB for everyone to drink - and I'm staying hydrated!!!
Just a few more days until the Children's Health fair. Most of my soldiers are talking about it and it seems, here in Kandahar, to be bigger than the Led Zeppelin reunion concert. We're sorting donations and will move everything via truck from the staging area to the hospital sometime Thursday morning. We're aiming for a 0900 start on Thursday and I hope people show up like they've indicated. That's the funny thing - these guys forget things so easily - like they've got selective amnesia.
The saga of Tim Bergeron and I continues. The other night we convoyed to pick up one of his guys (mentee) and when we approached the security checkpoint, the rocket sirens went off! We saw the back end of something flying and then it was followed by some red flares. Tim looked at me and said "here we go again" and we drove both looking up in the sky with eyes wide open. I'm not sure where the rockets landed, but we were safe. After picking up his mentee, we drove him to his house - a deserted run down looking project apartment building with no lights. The armed guard there scared the crap out of us - and thankfully we had an interpreter. I'd like to go back in the daytime to see the apartments - they appeared to be decrepit with the concrete roofs in certain places bombed out from the day when Osama bin Laden was a former tenant. But, people live in this!! Our engineers would condemn this and you'd not see one person living here, much less walking around the hazards. But welcome to Afghanistan - a place where nothing gets done unless the United States or the Coalition does it. Unbelieveable.
Cheers to all! Thanks for your continued support!!
John Pethel