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    Grounded: 2nd Recon defies gravity

    Grounded: 2nd Recon defies gravity

    Photo By Sgt. Austin Long | A Marine, with Force Company, 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, packs...... read more read more

    CAMP LEJEUNE, NORTH CAROLINA, UNITED STATES

    02.06.2015

    Story by Sgt. Austin Long 

    II Marine Expeditionary Force   

    CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. - Marines with 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion, 2nd Marine Division performed multiple parachute training exercises at Training Landing Zone Pheasant, aboard Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, and Marine Corps Auxiliary Landing Field Bogue, Jan. 27-29, 2015.

    A Marine hurtles toward the Earth with his life hanging in the balance for the next four to six seconds. The wind is screaming past his ears and rushing against his cheeks while the ground below gets closer by the second, he feels the sudden jerk pulling him back into the sky, slowing his speed, while he slowly drifts to the ground below where the quick impact will only re-affirm he is alive and safe.

    Marines with 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion, 2nd Marine Division performed multiple parachute training exercises at Training Landing Zone Pheasant, aboard Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, and Marine Corps Auxiliary Landing Field Bogue, Jan. 27-29, 2015.
    The Marines performed low level static line jumps at 1,500 feet from a CH-53E Super Stallion and a KC-130J Hercules, with and without combat loads. The Marines also performed High Altitude Low Opening free-fall jumps at 10,000 feet from a CH-47 Chinook.

    The training had a dual purpose for the battalion—update the Marines on their biannual jump qualification and increase their proficiency in parachuting.

    “Parachuting is one of our mission essential tasks,” said Capt. Thomas Wallin, the company commander of Alpha Company, 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion. “When using jump insertion methods, we can successfully insert into a landing zone, recon an area, and get important and timely information back to follow-on forces to help them complete their mission. Conducting training like this allows for us to be a beneficial force.”

    During the training, the Marines with more parachuting experience jumped with military packs weighing about 80-90 pounds. Other Marines jumped tandem, one with a person strapped to his chest and the other with a 500 pound barrel attached to him.

    According to Wallin, jumping tandem with personnel or military equipment is essential to mission success.

    “We can use this training to begin more difficult training,” said Wallin. “The more difficult training incorporates going into a landing zone as a whole team or a platoon with added friction in the process upon landing. The training is to make sure they can land on a drop zone correctly and become tactical once everyone has landed safely.”

    For the battalion, this type of training is an introduction to parachuting and is an accurate representation of real-world missions conducted by reconnaissance units.

    Wallin said the training was designed to prepare the Marines for being evaluated on the different types of parachute jumps. Wallin said the battalion must pass an evaluation in order to use parachuting as an insertion method, if needed, while deployed.
    For some of the Marines, this was their first time jumping with the battalion. Fifteen reconnaissance Marines recently graduated from the Army Airborne School and had to familiarize themselves with the type of parachute used by the Marine Corps and the insertion methods used by the battalion.

    “The training was overall a success,” said Staff Sgt. George Gordon, a parachute rigger with 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion. “The new Marines were able to familiarize themselves with the parachutes used by the Marine Corps and the Marines with experience were able to work on the things they needed to focus on.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.06.2015
    Date Posted: 02.09.2015 10:40
    Story ID: 154007
    Location: CAMP LEJEUNE, NORTH CAROLINA, US

    Web Views: 155
    Downloads: 6

    PUBLIC DOMAIN