British Trenches were waterlogged due to 2 key reasons:
In the trenches, there was water. Like when you can't play a football match, you have a waterlogged pitch. If you stood in the mud and water in the trenches for too long, you caught trench foot, which is sometimes fatal if you don't remove the gangrene.
The main differences between the two was all down to the fact that the Germans dug in 1st. this meant they were on higher ground and better soil conditions too. The British however, were barely 3 ft above sea level, so when they dug in, their trenches instantly flooded. Because of all the water they would regularly collapse. Also, the ground conditions were very bad; clay and sand which only led to more waterlogged trenches; also clya nad sand was hard to dig and shape. lastly, the Brithish commanding officers believed that the trenches were only temporary and so were hastily constructed. the Germans knew that they would be staying there for a time; and so carefully planned out the details of the trenches.
why did the french and british dug up trenches?To provide cover from view & fire of the enemy.
There were electric light in German trenches in WW1 because they were more advanced and had better trenches than the British.
They used shovels and picks to dig out the trenches.
In the trenches, there was water. Like when you can't play a football match, you have a waterlogged pitch. If you stood in the mud and water in the trenches for too long, you caught trench foot, which is sometimes fatal if you don't remove the gangrene.
TheGermans realized that they would have to stay in hem longer so they carefully planned their trenches. The British however didn't realize this and hastily constructed their trenches. Hope that helped!
The main differences between the two was all down to the fact that the Germans dug in 1st. this meant they were on higher ground and better soil conditions too. The British however, were barely 3 ft above sea level, so when they dug in, their trenches instantly flooded. Because of all the water they would regularly collapse. Also, the ground conditions were very bad; clay and sand which only led to more waterlogged trenches; also clya nad sand was hard to dig and shape. lastly, the Brithish commanding officers believed that the trenches were only temporary and so were hastily constructed. the Germans knew that they would be staying there for a time; and so carefully planned out the details of the trenches.
why did the french and british dug up trenches?To provide cover from view & fire of the enemy.
There were electric light in German trenches in WW1 because they were more advanced and had better trenches than the British.
no
The trenches were called saps and the people who dug them were called sappers.
The British were fighting the Germans in the trenches
WWI Trenches versus Water/Mud Although many if not most of the trenches of WWI were plagued with standing water and mud, not all were. Where the contour of the ground allowed, the bottom elevation of the trenches would be sloped to a point where the trench opened to lower ground, allowing enough drainage to greatly reduce or eliminate standing water. Although an improvement, it did not prevent the trench bottoms from being a quagmire of mud during rainy periods.
British trenches were miserable; people lived under constant threat of being hit by gunfire or exploding shells. Disease was also rampant, as soldiers had little protection from cold and rain.
They dug trenches to protect themselves from the weapons of the enemy. Turks vs. British
No, there were no donkeys in the trenches what so ever. Only men and rats.