they suffered with trench foot and the got lice
About 200,000
The trenches were in rained-out muddy areas created by the destruction of the landscape
Living in the trenches during wartime was characterized by constant exposure to harsh conditions, such as cold, wet weather, unsanitary living conditions leading to diseases, lack of sleep, and the constant fear of enemy attacks and artillery bombardment. Additionally, soldiers had to endure long periods of boredom, isolation, and intense psychological stress.
Bad
sad, depressed and homesick because of the harsh and horrible living conditions and the soldiers missed their home family and friends.
Trench foot and dysentery were the major conditions found in the trenches. Filled with standing stagnant cold water, soldiers on both sides suffered from foot rot and lack of sanitation.
thgg
The trenches were Dirty, smelly, horrible places. You had other peoples corpses (dead bodies) everywhere. And there were also rats :(
Life in the World War 1 trenches was dirty, smelly and often full of diseases. There were also millions of rats in ww1 trenches. A pair of mating rodents could produce 900 young per year in trench conditions which further led to the spread of disease. Terrible sanitary conditions and close-quarters living created a fertile environment for many lethal illnesses, such as cholera, dysentery, malaria, scarlet fever, diphtheria and influenza, which spread from the trenches to inflict a raging worldwide epidemic that killed many millions of people during and after the war when soldiers returned home and spread it further. Most experts believe more people died from diseases fostered by the trenches, than from direct combat. Living conditions were considered so bad that every country that participated vowed to never repeat the mistake.
the conditions were horrible. If you want a better description anyone can feel free to change it
Answerliving conditions in the trenches are hard why is it hard to live in the trenchesMany of Brittish soldiers died because of disease. The sanitary conditions in the trenches are quite poor, and common infections included dysentery, typhus, and cholera. Many soldiers suffered from parasites and related infections. Poor hygiene also led to fungal conditions.
the wold hide in new york