I'd be interested.
I'd be interested.
"I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day."
The hook is that it's a team building event. The method is physical exhaustion mixed with group events, like carrying a big log from here to there (and other things)
It's more lengthy, but that's really all there is to it. The US Military has used the same techniques for a very long time.
I'm young enough to think it'd be fun, but old enough to know that I don't need to prove anything to anyone.
Just doing what I can to stay on this side of the dirt.
I put GoRuck in the same category as Tough Mudder or Spartan Race - Tell me again why am I supposed to pay concert ticket prices to be abused???
I went "rucking" this past weekend, in the snow. Didn't cost me a dime. The team aspect is the only thing appealing about GoRuck.
http://improvingeddie.wordpress.com/...seed-starting/
That's awesome! I'm proud of you! Why don't we save the thread for people who are interested in hearing about/organizing/participating in a challenge. Go start a "GORUCK. Tough Mudder, Spartan Race" is ghey thread.
PS:why would I pay for concert tickets when I can just listen to it on my ipod?
About the only positive I can see is the 20% discount on quality USA made gear. Without that, they make Kifaru look cheap!
Putting GORUCK in the same category as Tough Mudder or Spartan Race is a terrible oversight. If you've read the actual origins of the program you'll notice the only thing the two have in common is physical challenge.
It's a class. There are Cadre. It is a team challenge not a race. To dismiss a GORUCK as a "pay money to go rucking" event only tells me that you're reading comprehension is less than a third graders.
From GORUCKs origin page:
"In that process, adversity spared neither gear nor the people carrying it. And people became the focus. The other Cadre and I taught Challenge takers how to lead, how to solve problems, and how to work better, together. Human bonds formed, limitations disappeared, and classes persevered."
This program gentlemen is a training opportunity not unlike your range days, firearms training classes. Learning to lead and be a part of a team is as perishable skill as any. Those who have served in the military know this. Those who have served in combat know this even better. Very rarely do civilians have the opportunity to be led, challenged and trained by SOF veterans. I have had the blessing in my own life to have been trained by, work with and challenged by SOF soldiers and veterans and they are hands down the smartest most professional men I have ever had the opportunity of knowing.
I'm suprised to see a board of this caliber with so many military and military honoring citizens dismiss such an opportunity.