Mother Nature vs the Infantry Soldier in Vietnam


In my last post, I focused more on the first day a Cherry spent in the jungle.  He discovered how difficult it was to search for the enemy through the thick, impenetrable jungle while carrying sixty-five pounds of supplies on his back.  The temperature and humidity were both near one-hundred and it felt like walking through the largest sauna in the world.  His first night was like a terrible nightmare; the pitch blackness limited visibility to only a foot or so.

His bed was the jungle ground; sharp twigs, roots and stones jabbed at him all night long.  He was so tired, but could not sleep on this first night.  He knew that the enemy was out there looking for him, and every shadow – be it a movement of leaves during a short breeze or the moonlight that filtered through the trees and danced across the vegetation – told his brain that the enemy was moving around.  He was paralyzed and frozen in place with fear, too afraid to even close his eyes.  It turned out to be the most terrifying night of his entire life.

Today, I want to write more about another fear these young men had to endure while living in the jungles.  Mother Nature had created many wonderful things over time; some were beautiful and others were downright frightening.  The jungles of Vietnam were home to every creature, beast, and insect known to man.  Some soldiers had attested to seeing tigers and elephants in the boonies, but I can’t say that I saw either one.  However, I had witnessed many wild boars, cobras, small and deadly viper snakes, and a few boa constrictors.

Tarantulas (and other species / sizes of spiders), ants, and black horseflies all hurt like hell when they bit.  Bees, wasps, hornets, centipedes, millipedes, lizards, frogs, rats, scorpions, land and water leeches, orangutans, spider monkeys, bats, and hordes of mosquitoes attacked us whenever we entered their domain.  The liquid bug juice supplied by the military kept many of the flying insects from landing on bare skin, but did nothing to prevent those long-beaked malaria-carrying insects from biting you through your clothes.  At night, there was no escaping the continued buzzing in your ears as the swarms watched over you while you tried to sleep.  If you felt something moving across your body during the night, there were no lights to turn on or flashlights available to investigate.  You took your chances and either swatted, brushed, jumped up from the ground, or just left it alone.  Some of these creatures had claws that gripped you; pissing them off by swatting at them usually resulted in a retaliatory bite, sting, or pinch.  Most of the above were poisonous and could make one very sick or even kill them.

Someone once said that what you can’t see won’t hurt you.  That might work for your peace of mind during the night, but let me tell you, these creatures were always found in the damnedest of places first thing in the morning.  You could find them in your pockets, boots, helmet, rucksack, canteen cup, or laying with you under the warmth of your lightweight poncho liner blanket.  A search and destroy effort was usually the first thing on the agenda every morning.

We had no choice but to endure, but how would you have reacted?

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9 Responses to “Mother Nature vs the Infantry Soldier in Vietnam”

  1. Liz DiGiovanni Says:

    Can’t wait to read the entire book. A spellbinding, honest and open experience. Good work.

  2. Rich Watts Says:

    A2/2 /12 1st Air Cav 68-69 ……..Great description of a ” right of passage” for the jungle grunt. Can’t wait to get my copy…!

    • Rich, thanks for the kind words – I do hope you enjoy my book. Please be sure to return to the blog and leave a comment about the book itself. / John

  3. Cheers!…

    This is one of the top sites I have visited in some time, cheers for writing!. Bookmarked and will be back for more….

  4. John great book! I didn’t see any tiger over there either but seen a lot of waterbuffalo. I remember a young vietnan girl suggesting that I should go boom-boom one. That was not going to happen. Thanks for the great review on my book. Great writing to you and good luck and I hope you sell a million books. It is a great story.

  5. steve clark Says:

    I too was a grunt with the 4th and the 101st from July 70 to July 71. Good reading on your website. Reading your blogs takes me back to those times,especially the cherry and R&R articles. Loved Bangkok. Keep up the good work.

    • Steve, Thank you for posting on my blog, I’m glad you enjoyed my articles. Perhaps we crossed paths while in the 101st. Spread the word about this website. Welcome Home Brother! God bless and Merry Christmas!

  6. Don’t forget the red ants that hit from above those big leaves while out on patrol. D/5/7 Cav. Do remember the water buffalo. 68-69. Best thing was when we started getting the LRRPS meals. Lighter to carry instead of all C’s. And C4 to heat the water. When the honchos realized we were breaking up the Claymores for it, they
    started ordering it.

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