Sanders:
I wonder if the stuff I bought was seconds and therefore defective. All of it was new including the ALICE pack and was super cheap to buy. I am assuming most of it was late 70s and early 80s production. I hated the pack for three reasons: weight distribution was way out from the body unlike modern civi packs; the shoulder straps would come unsnapped, and the water proof liner did not work well at all. That said you can pack a ton of stuff in it. The buttons were barley sown on the woodlands and fell off. I never served so I have no idea if issue gear was better quality but judging from my son's stuff I doubt it.
My Rhodie boonie is new manufacture from Fireforce Ventures. I have no idea how close to the original it is but it is very well made. The brim is narrow compared to the US boonie, which is the best hat ever made for outdoor stuff.
4thIDvet:
My old man grew up in the 1940s and was a teenager in the 1950s so his story is like yours. He said that all of his friend's parents, but his, were WWII vets and they would wear there parent's military garb like over coats, boots, fatigues, ect. They played with deactivated rifles. Those days are gone, kids would now be arrested if they ran around with deactivated M1 carbines like my father's friends did. You could still get away with that stuff in the 70s and 80s. It is no wonder so many kids now are so fat, lazy and act like girls.
I wonder if the stuff I bought was seconds and therefore defective. All of it was new including the ALICE pack and was super cheap to buy. I am assuming most of it was late 70s and early 80s production. I hated the pack for three reasons: weight distribution was way out from the body unlike modern civi packs; the shoulder straps would come unsnapped, and the water proof liner did not work well at all. That said you can pack a ton of stuff in it. The buttons were barley sown on the woodlands and fell off. I never served so I have no idea if issue gear was better quality but judging from my son's stuff I doubt it.
My Rhodie boonie is new manufacture from Fireforce Ventures. I have no idea how close to the original it is but it is very well made. The brim is narrow compared to the US boonie, which is the best hat ever made for outdoor stuff.
4thIDvet:
My old man grew up in the 1940s and was a teenager in the 1950s so his story is like yours. He said that all of his friend's parents, but his, were WWII vets and they would wear there parent's military garb like over coats, boots, fatigues, ect. They played with deactivated rifles. Those days are gone, kids would now be arrested if they ran around with deactivated M1 carbines like my father's friends did. You could still get away with that stuff in the 70s and 80s. It is no wonder so many kids now are so fat, lazy and act like girls.

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