The problem with this thinking is it forgets that most of the CAF isn't in combat arms regiments, and most of the ResF trades having issues with training aren't combat arms. Most support occupation/units don't have block leave apart from Christmas, when most of the CAF/GoC shuts down. Even then, some occupations/units work right through the holidays, because some things can't shut down.
My point was, that an institutional change to make the RegF spend it's summers training ResF would have massive and likely unintended consequences, that would need to be weighed against the potential benefit of getting a few more reservists through a few more courses.
The CAF is a big institution, and changes to the CAF as an institution need to be considered beyond how they would impact an infantry battalion.
And yet an Army is fundamentally about fielding infantry battalions (and cavalry squadrons and gun batteries).
The more complex we make a command the harder we make the ability to assemble, organize and train it.
Training rifle platoons, cavalry troops and gun sections is relatively easy and straight forwards. The difficult bit seems to come when capabilities that require more training and constant use are incorporated into the permanent structure of higher levels of command. When Atts become permanent if you will.
If infantry battalions were primarily about raising rifle companies then creating reserve mass would be a lot simpler. But when every battalion is seen as a mini battle group ready to take the field tonight, with all sorts of support elements and required Atts like Medics and MPs and Mechanics then we complicate things, and perhaps overly complicate them.
I have continually made reference to the difference between Woolwich and Sandhurst, between Ordnance and the Combat Arms, between scarlet and blue, and I would note the association of Woolwich and Greenwich.
The raising of an army is about creating mass and particularly massing infantry and cavalry. That is where the reserve system can excel.
The Ordnance is always going to be a different beast, and in that I include the Navy and the Air Force, the other blue suiters. That dichotomy has been recognized at least since the Hanoverians established the Corps of Engineers and Royal Regiment of Artillery at Woolwich Arsenal in 1716.
The Commissariat has a different set of skill sets, and provenance entirely, with ranks and promotions more akin to the police and the civil service.
Only in Canada, courtesy of Paul Hellyer, do we try to a Bombardier and a Corporal into the same thing. Or a Sergeant into a Stores Clerk. Actually, that isn't right. It isn't just in Canada.
But there are perfectly valid reasons for treating different trades differently. A career in an office, or one that requires a life at sea, or occasionally being called out to live in a tent in a desert for months, all require separate management.
So when Army.CA spends time talking about Army requirements, and that includes how to raise an effective mass army in an emergency, it isn't to denigrate the other professions that are necessary to the success of the army. Nor is it to ignore the importance of the Ordnance, the Navy and the Air Force to the national defence, with or without the army.
But the constant tendency of every discussion to revert to a discussion about the army reserve might suggest the centrality of the issue at least as far as the Army itself is concerned.
....
Every Army discussion starts with looking for more Privates for Majors to command. We maintain the number of regular infantry battalions and cavalry regiments, and even artillery and engineer regiments. This despite reducing the number of soldiers in the battalions to 40% of their authorised strength 40 years ago. We reduced the number of rifle companies from 4 to 3 to 2. We eliminated the support company and then re-raised it. We reduced the number of platoons in the companies left. We are reducing the number of sections in the platoons. We have reduced the size of the sections.
But we always maintain the number of command billets.
And then wonder how we are going to make up the numbers.
Of course everything ends up being a discussion about the reserve.
Everyone of you see this coat of arms on a daily basis.
The Lion and the Unicorn.
It is easy to discuss the attributes of the Unicorn.
The Lion is harder.
The Unicorn is the national animal of Scotland. It may as well be the mascot for the Canadian Army Reserves.