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‘We actually had a flea infestation, which really put the icing on the cake.’ In this episode, Todd and Jake talk through their experiences in the privilege of their first platoon and troop command. Many argue that one of the best things that you can be afforded is legal responsibility over a large group of people and that you should cherish that privilege because it is fleeting. This episode is about how we cherished our command.
While you have already heard stories of the culmination of Jake's civil engineering studies with his ground-breaking Honours thesis, unbelievably the first project that he actually designed as a fully qualified engineer went over budget, over scope and over time. We tell the story of that project, fondly called The Deck at 6 Engineer Support Regiment that if it were to be dug up in one hundred years' time the archaeologists would wonder what the crew building it did because Jake singlehandedly quadrupled the amount of concrete in the ground with project mismanagement.
In this episode, we talk through Domestic Operations in Todd ‘deploying’ to Hobart, Tasmania for three-months over Christmas and New Year’s Eve to provide oversight on hotel quarantine for seasonal workers that the state was desperate for. Jake tells the stories of building cyclone shelters and schools in Fiji as part of Defence Assistance to the Civil Community where he made-up the pivotal structural ratio of cane toads to concrete. This is the meaty content where we talk through achieving real things.
Subscribe to The Cove Community Podcast so that you do not miss next week’s episode and the last in Season One on the first time returning to all-corps training since RMC-D, the All-Corps Captains’ Course with ~90 of your peers, and another of Jake’s original songs, Goodbye Canungra.