Posted on 06/18/2005 10:00:35 AM PDT by 68skylark
TAHOUA, Niger Heat exhaustion, dehydration, diarrhea. Stuff happens when soldiers spend days in 120-degree desert heat in Third World conditions.
Thats one reason soldiers from the 160th Forward Surgical Team were brought to Niger for Flintlock 05.
There might still be dust from Iraq on their medical tent, one said, because that stuff is hard to get out. But inside its nearly as clean as a hospital. One week into their mission in Niger, the doctors and medics of the 160th FST had treated three cases of heat- or food-related misfortune.
Flintlock 05 is a monthlong training exercise for the armies of five African countries focusing on terrorist activity.
Depending on whose watch-thermometer you believe, it was either 124 degrees or 129 degrees Monday on the dusty practice range outside of town. Wednesday was just as hot as the troops worked on combat skills.
When a soldiers body runs dry, its time for a trip to the tent for intravenous fluid and rest.
In Tahoua, the medical tent isnt only for American patients. One Nigerien soldier fell off his motorcycle and cut his ear. Another suffering from stomach pain was treated.
On Wednesday, a Nigerien sergeant major underwent surgery to remove an egg-size fat growth on his arm. U.S. Army Drs. (Maj.) Imad Haque and (Lt. Col.) Mike Dye, with help from Nigerien Dr. (Capt.) Oumara Mamane, did the honors.
They gave Sgt. Maj. Abdoulaye Ahamat a shot to numb the arm, cut it open, dug underneath the growth and snipped it loose from its stalk. Dye said they then removed the growth, checked for bleeding and sewed him up, finishing the job with a dressing over the stitches.
Very well! Abdoulaye said about the procedure. I am happy.
Toilet christened
A small but nagging problem in the global war on terror where to go potty was solved Monday when Pappys Pavilion opened for business.
The pavilion is a three-seat flush toilet. It was named after Pappy Jones, the baseball cap-wearing, pipe-smoking instructor at Special Forces qualifying school in Fort Bragg, N.C.
Everybody who came through the Q-school engineering course knows Pappy, said Billy, a sergeant first class with the Alabama-based 20th Special Forces Group who, like most Special Forces soldiers, asks that his full name not be used.
The soldiers bought from local merchants about $1,200 in boards, PCV pipe and toilets. They then spent parts of three hot days sawing boards, pounding nails and digging a trench. The soldiers, from the 20th SFG, 418th Civil Affairs Battalion and 66th Military Intelligence, applied the finishing touches when they hooked up the pipes and attached the thrones.
Upon arriving in Tahoua late Thursday night, the team discovered there were no johns, just a 6-inch hole in the ground where one once stood. After several days of assuming the camel spider position, they can now relieve themselves in porcelain comfort.
Note to Pappy: They forgot the toilet brushes. Oy!
Thorns making a point
At the southern edge of the Sahara desert, what few plants that grow are literally tough as nails.
In less than one week in Tahoua, the vehicles being used by Team Niger have had 17 flat tires, according to Sgt. Chris Berry, a mechanic with 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group. The problem is thorns.
Theyre like a mix between a nail and a syringe, Berry said. Theyve got a tip thats so damned sharp they could easily go through a finger.
Team Niger has rented a small fleet of Toyota Landcruisers and pickup trucks and both types of vehicles have had issues. The Landcruisers use tires with tubes (fast-leaking), while the pickups are tubeless (slow-leaking).
Luckily, Berry found a shop in town where the flats can be fixed for 1,000 CFA francs (about $2) each.
In addition, the mechanic said that when Nigerien autos break down, they tend to get stop-gap measures instead of real fixes. For example, when a fuse blows, the Nigeriens choose to bypass the fuse by wrapping it with a strand of metal instead of replacing the fuse.
One cars generator has burned out as a result, he said.
Im going to go into town to try and find the right generator, Berry said.
Applying the rule that you-know-what runs downhill, Spcs. Aaron Alpuche and Ruben Gomez of Team Niger line up the drain pipe for the new toilets they helped build at their camp in Tahoua, Niger.
Charlie Coon / S&S
it isnt 120 degrees in Nigeria, its more like 140....
We have people in Djubouti that have to deal with it nearly year-round...
Did I hear somewhere that Djubouti is the hottest country on earth? I think I heard that somewhere.
I dont know about that, but it is certainly up there...
add to that the malarial mosquitoes...
not a fun place.
Oh, man. I don't wanna know.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.