In WW I the soldiers spent most of their time in trenches. It was very muddy.
thats a load of rubbish it was six months at a time you lot know nothing about ww1
Smoke mad blunts
No they did not. The actual meal arrangements was that a pair of soldiers would be sent from the front line to some of the auxiliary trenches (the trenches located behind), they would then move barrels containing the food (usually a form of stew that was prepared every meal time) to the front line. If one person tripped or the stew was spied, the soldiers went without. Hope this answers it!
During WWI, there were long periods where neither side gained any ground. While this was happening, the soldiers spent their time in the trenches with not much to do.
In WW I the soldiers spent most of their time in trenches. It was very muddy.
thats a load of rubbish it was six months at a time you lot know nothing about ww1
they studied most of the time
Smoke mad blunts
The trenches were in the front lines of the war zone, they were dug by the soldiers who then both fought from and lived in these trenches for long periods of time. They were small but not as small as we would think. They were dug in a zigzag pattern so that if an enemy breached the defenses and entered the trench he would not be able to kill a lot of soldiers since they would not be in a straight line.
During World War I, many soldiers had to fight in the trenches. These were unhygienic, deadly, cramped, and frightening. In almost every account, soldiers talk about their initial feelings of fear upon arriving in the trenches, and how that anxiety lasted throughout the war, and sometimes beyond.
Ancient Egyptian soldiers would relax or see their family during their free time
No they did not. The actual meal arrangements was that a pair of soldiers would be sent from the front line to some of the auxiliary trenches (the trenches located behind), they would then move barrels containing the food (usually a form of stew that was prepared every meal time) to the front line. If one person tripped or the stew was spied, the soldiers went without. Hope this answers it!
Ancient Egyptian soldiers would relax or see their family during their free time
They would fill with water. This was actually a serious problem. The soldiers were in water most the time, which caused problems of the foot including "trench foot."
They didn't for the most part. soldiers in trenches especially. It was more important to save yourself than to stay clean.
it provided protection from bullets. the only bad thing is they had to crouch most of the time and mortar shells could get in.