The Situation Report
Black Hawks:
High Speed, Low Drag, Soldiers Best Friend.
After one year of absence
from Georgia Wing encampments, the Black Hawks have returned!
At about 0900, the cadets
began a 1.3 mile long, very motivating road march from the barracks to the
Fort Benning airfield. Various cadences could be heard for miles, ranging
from 'Flying Fortress' to 'Yellow Ribbon'. As a contributing factor to the
motivation, today was the hottest day at Encampment so far. Canteens were
drained, blouse sleeves were loosened, and morale broke all-time records.
Each cadet finished at least four canteens while on the airfield, so
hydration was not an issue. However, the heat index alone caused some
discomfort. Because of the high humidity, the 96 degree weather jumped to
105 degrees on the heat index. Despite these detrimental factors, all
cadets arrived safely at the airfield by 0930.
Following their arrival, all
basic flights were split up into groups of 11 (called a stick), and the
Black Hawk rides began.
The cadets reported that they think the Black Hawk rides were
the best part of Encampment thus far. On a professional level, the Black
Hawks still rocked.
The safety features on the
Black Hawk are pretty straight-forward, but take a while to master. Take
the seat belts, for instance, it is a standard four point waist and
shoulder harness, but the size adjustment mechanism is a bit different
from standard devices.
On behalf of the First
Cadet Training Group, Georgia Wing, we would like to thank the Ravens, the
air transport detachment for Fort Benning, for their time and their
investment, and hope to continue working with them.
Leadership Corner
Selfless Leadership
In order to be a selfless
leader you need to know the types of behavioral patterns. These types are
mostly associated with animals or colors. You have to understand the
strengths and weaknesses of your subordinates and staff before you can
lead them efficiently. The goal is to lead and be led. Know the position
your staff is coming from. There are five points to selfless leadership,
which are empathic listening, goal integration, collaboration, community
building, and self reflection. (Self reflection being the most needed).
You have to realize what
you have done right and wrong before you can continue to lead. Could this
have been done better, how did this help, These are the things to think on
to be efficient. A good leader is a leader that has failed, and knows that
they are not "All-powerful". (community building) One cadet said "A TV is
like our Staff, the leader is the TV and the subordinates the pixels.
Every pixel is put together to make a picture." You leave out one pixel
the whole picture is flawed.
QUIZ BOWL
After evening chow,
cadets proceeded to the basement for that sacred competition known as the
“Quiz Bowl.” Cadets were asked various questions on general cadet
knowledge, aerospace and leadership. It was a tough, exciting match in
which three cadets from each flight lined up to their “buzzers”. After
receiving the question, each team collaborated on the possible answer, and
then buzzed in with their answer. If the answer was correct the submitting
team would receive ten points, however, bonus questions were worth five
points. Wrong responses to a normal question were 10 points subtracted and
no points were lost for incorrect answers to bonus questions. At the
conclusion of the battle between flights, Alpha prevailed. However, in the
next round they were dominated by “The Secret Weapon”, Staff.
Match Results:
Match #1: Bravo vs.
Delta
0 - 75
Match #2: Echo vs.
Charlie
-10 - 80
Match #3: Charlie
vs. Delta
85 - 10
Match #4: Charlie
vs. Alpha
30 - 70
Match #5: Alpha vs.
Staff
15 - A Lot
PHOTO LOG