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Foxhole stockpile
Foxhole stockpile






foxhole stockpile

Boom, the newly replenished supply of 200 shirts gone. I hear one shriek "I found shirts guys!!". Takes an entire stack (99) of ammo and drives off never to be seen again.Īn APC drives by with 3 people on. Someone took 400 shirts out of a box and threw them in the HQ TH (as far as I can tell, useless since that's the one place that doesn't use shirts)Ī HT without a gunner drives by. But then we saw hours of stockpiling just crumble to dust. That means everything has to be 'just right', so I was stockpiling together with people scrapping, driving logi's around etc. Farranac Coast is a stalemate, and in my opinion the only way to break that will be a well supplied proper assault. I just organize".Īnd then yesterday happened. I saw the horror stories of QM's TKing teammates, reprimanding etc. While doing so I quickly learned the ropes of the game while reading some posts here in this subreddit on the matter. I felt something is better than nothing, so I figured I'd just have to pick it up quickly. Noone else wanted to take the role and I didn't have the experience with the game. When I first got asked/pushed into the role after only a few hours of I was reluctant. I also make sure there are stacks of (e.g.) 99 HE grenades ready to go to the front or stacks of 12.7 ammo so HT's can drive by and get loaded up with multiple boxes of ammo quickly. I don't pretend to know it all (I've only played the game for three days after all.). I make sure shirts are being cooked, ammo, medkits.

foxhole stockpile foxhole stockpile

I don't consider it a 'power-trip leadership' role, I consider it to be a project manager who does nothing else but organize and ask "how can I help YOU be effective". I reckon some of you will be rolling your eyes right now, so let me first explain how I see the role. However, in doing so during the last few days I sort of stumbled into the unofficial role of QM. Now, this is not about the map, personally I feel it's weakness (the stalemate) is also it's strength (you have to get together and work through it). It was eye opening to hear some many wonderful stories and I am sure there will be more to come.I've played about 31 hours in the last three days, during this time I've spent all my time on Dog Europe which is currently in a stalemate on Farranac Coast. She was buried in Fairfax Memorial Cemetery in Fairfax, VA.Īs a history major being able to hear about the thought process of someone who lived during the great depression was influential to me, as well as the fact that our family is partially related to the Fairfax nobles. This stockpile of everyday essentials would just pile up around her house and in the basement.Īnges Beavers Davis died at the age of 91 due to old age on September 23, 2008. Due to this she would stockpile everything from toilet paper to food and canned goods. The most impactful think I ever heard about my great grandma was that she grew up during the great depression when nearly everything was hard to come by. This freezer was so full that apparently she had to put a box of nuts and bolts on top of it to try and keep the freezer closed. My Grandma as told me a story about how in her house she stockpiled different meats in a freezer in her basement. I was sitting down to talk with my grandma after dinner about two weeks ago, and when we were cleaning up dinner she said, "My mom used to say pour fast so you don't spill." After hearing this, all I could do was laugh because all I could think that it was not physically possible. As she gold older she did sell eggs to people around town. My grandma told me that she quit high school to get married. She never had a job, nor did she graduate high school. Of the stories that I have heard about my great grandmother, the most intriguing have come from her daughter. Mary Jane Davis was born on Decemin Manassas, VA. Two boys, and 2 girls, the youngest of which was my grandmother. Fairfax county, which Aggie lived in, was founded in 1742 by the Fairfax nobles of England.Īfter their marriage, Aggie and her husband had 4 children. From here on in her life she was known as Anges Beavers Davis, but most people knew her best as Aggie.Īggie was the daughter of Gracie Ellis and Andrew Beavers, while her husband can trace his lineage back to the Fairfax family. She was married to Howard Taft Davis on Februin Rockville Maryland. To this day, that is all that I remember of my great grandmother, but the memory vividly lives on.Īnges Elizabeth Beavers was born on Jin Buckhall, VA. I was about two years old and we went to visit her at her house, and out her backyard was just a big field full of foxholes. My only real memory of my great grandmother was of her house.








Foxhole stockpile