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…and they say DEI initiatives don’t helpThe Defence Women's Advisory Organization?
…and they say DEI initiatives don’t helpThe Defence Women's Advisory Organization?
I mean, if they were the organization that was finally able to get the heat and light on how uncomfortable, ugly, and outdated the Army DEU is by all means.…and they say DEI initiatives don’t help
Copy re: operational stuff. Why not ditch the CAF committee entirely, or dial it back to a vestigial function?It’s the other way around.
The environmental committees (which meet like twice a year) control the operational and specialist dress because there’s no point talking about flight suits to a group with the Army and Navy involved. Similarly, NCDs or new Army-specific items.
The national committee (again, twice a year) discusses the DEU stuff.
The minutes are available on DWAN and they discuss all sorts of things.
One example I can think of it the Naval Warfare Officer “moustache”. Originally the RCN said only folks still in RCN uniform can wear it.Copy re: operational stuff. Why not ditch the CAF committee entirely, or dial it back to a vestigial function?
. . . Why not ditch the CAF committee entirely, or dial it back to a vestigial function?
Copy re: operational stuff. Why not ditch the CAF committee entirely, or dial it back to a vestigial function?
Which suggests a vestigial committee, and some hard rules around transferability, not something where, e.g., an Army CWO can have input on Navy accoutrements.Because a lot of our folks wear the same quals despite their “environment.” For example a Navy Medic might earn their jump wings in a field ambulance.
Which suggests a vestigial committee, and some hard rules around transferability, not something where, e.g., an Army CWO can have input on Navy accoutrements.
Preposterous!So like you could have the Army CWO discuss this with the RCN CWO, and the RCAF CWO, possibly around a table a couple times a year with a couple other stake holders to come to common understandings about those issues ?
That’s a real risk of the RCN exceeding their authority on rank designations — that by the time the new “pirate ranks” make it to cabinet, it’s a cabinet formed by another party that makes the decision not to amend the KR&O — forcing the RCN to backtrack and sheepishly try to explain years of using illegal rank designations.I'm wondering if we are going to see the whole Sailor 1st Class thing go away after the next election.
3RCR Pet Early 70's under LCol Ron Cheriton.The photo was from the 1977 edition of The Patrician (a PDF download). The officer is not identified, however he would have been with 3VP. I used that photo to illustrate that way back when, some officers of the PPCLI wore wedge caps - either (I speculate) as a nod to a Rifles heritage or because they thought they could look as cool as the Royal Green Jackets exchange officer (they couldn't). I remember the few times that I saw officers wearing it in Calgary they were in service dress, usually S4 (short sleeve shirt). It's odd seeing an army officer of that era wearing a wedge with combats, but from the same pub there's another image of someone also wearing the wedge cap, this time in work dress.
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I'll take this up a little bit.The photo was from the 1977 edition of The Patrician (a PDF download). The officer is not identified, however he would have been with 3VP. I used that photo to illustrate that way back when, some officers of the PPCLI wore wedge caps - either (I speculate) as a nod to a Rifles heritage or because they thought they could look as cool as the Royal Green Jackets exchange officer (they couldn't). I remember the few times that I saw officers wearing it in Calgary they were in service dress, usually S4 (short sleeve shirt). It's odd seeing an army officer of that era wearing a wedge with combats, but from the same pub there's another image of someone also wearing the wedge cap, this time in work dress.
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British Army Coloured Field Service Caps 1937 to 1941
arnhemjim.blogspot.com
Just like the "Jerries."During the last big, Big, BIG dust up (most of us vs the 'Jerries' in the 1930s and '40s) most Canadians wors a version of the wedge cap. The beret was, mainly, for tank crews and their RCEME helpers.
And just for a giggle, here's the Canadian army field service cap and the German Wehrmacht M34 field service cap.
The the M34 was replaced by a very similar but unpopular M42 which itself was quickly changed to the M43 which was the same but had a visor added to shade the eyes.