JD LOCK

Lieutenant Colonel
US Army (Retired)

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The Coveted Black and Gold


For more than 200 years, U.S. Army Rangers have earned their unrivaled reputation as the world's premier warriors with bravery, blood, and sacrifice. Being a Ranger is a function of attitude and a state of mind, as well as a matter of skills and training, and it is the mission of the U.S. Army Ranger School to meld and to fortify these attributes. Ranger School is a journey that must be taken one day at a time...and each day of that journey is captured in this book. It is the cumulative effect of each of those days, the arduous work, the deprivation, the misery, that leads to what is ultimately called "the Ranger School experience"
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Mountain Phase Standards

The 5th Ranger Training Battalion operates the mountain phase which is twenty-one days long and is subdivided into four sub phases: lower and upper mountaineering, mountain techniques, and tactical operations. Here, students will negotiate mountainous terrain, conduct day and nighttime repelling, build rope bridges, and move cross-country conducting day and night combat missions.

After arriving at Camp Frank D. Merrill, the students are assigned billets within the garrison cantonment. While in garrison, PT is continued with runs of various distances. The first three days are spent within the camp area learning how to tie knots to secure ropes and climbing equipment for mountain operations and how to secure and anchor their rappelling lines. Basic rappelling skills such as rope handling and belaying are also taught prior to each student's initial rappel down a 20-foot wall of wooden slats.

Moving out of the cantonment area on the fourth day, the students tackle a sixty-foot cliff where they learn how to individually rappel with and without rucksacks. More advanced rappelling techniques include buddy rappelling with an 'injured' comrade strapped to the back and a stretcher assist rappel where two Rangers assist a third down the cliff while he is strapped to a stretcher. Successful completion of this part of the course includes passing the knot and belaying test and successfully performing three daytime rappels and a nighttime rappel with rucksack (during the winter months a fixed rope descent may be substituted for the nighttime rappel). Of the three daytime rappels, one must be with rucksack and a second must be accomplished with only two bounds against the cliff.

Following completion of the lower mountaineering phase, it's on to upper mountaineering for days five and six. On top of Mount Yonah, the highest peak in Georgia, students will learn how to conduct free climbs, suspension climbs, and how to use safety lines and mountaineering equipment to climb as well as descend.

The field training exercises commence on day eight and involve tactical operations at the platoon and company level. Students conduct the same type of operations as in the past--reconnaissance, ambush, raids, airborne and air assault--but the accomplishment of these missions is much more difficult than at Benning because of the environment in which they have to be performed. Moving along inclines and ridgelines, landing in small drop zones--the smallest being Garrett's Farm at 150 meters by 100 meters with a stream and a Y-shaped band of trees running through the middle of the DZ--and landing zones, makes each mission a serious challenge. There are more injuries in this phase than in any other. Everything from scrapes, bruises, and sprains to more serious injuries such as pulled or torn muscles, dislocations, and broken bones are common occurrences. To successfully complete the mountain phase with the minimum of injuries is a significant accomplishment in and of itself.


The Coveted Black and Gold: Chapter Excerpts

Main Page
Introduction
Benning Phase Standards
Benning Phase Experience
Mountain Phase Standards
Mountain Phase Experience
Florida Phase Standards
Florida Phase Experience
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