Tom Hruby
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Team one for people listening, odd numbers West Coast, even numbers East. So you walked metaphorically 50 yards from the Bud's compound in your first command.
Team one for people listening, odd numbers West Coast, even numbers East. So you walked metaphorically 50 yards from the Bud's compound in your first command.
Team one for people listening, odd numbers West Coast, even numbers East. So you walked metaphorically 50 yards from the Bud's compound in your first command.
The tread did not almost kill you. We are there as an instructor to save you.
The tread did not almost kill you. We are there as an instructor to save you.
The tread did not almost kill you. We are there as an instructor to save you.
For anybody listening, the tread is very easy. No, don't overlook it.
For anybody listening, the tread is very easy. No, don't overlook it.
For anybody listening, the tread is very easy. No, don't overlook it.
I have to emotionally prepare them for failure.
I have to emotionally prepare them for failure.
I have to emotionally prepare them for failure.
This is, and so this is five minutes. And as an instructor, what you're looking at, like if you bend your wrist, there's usually like two creases. You need to have basically the creases of the skin in your wrist above water. So they need to be, what would be camera angle? People can see basically that much of your hand out of the water, both hands out.
This is, and so this is five minutes. And as an instructor, what you're looking at, like if you bend your wrist, there's usually like two creases. You need to have basically the creases of the skin in your wrist above water. So they need to be, what would be camera angle? People can see basically that much of your hand out of the water, both hands out.
This is, and so this is five minutes. And as an instructor, what you're looking at, like if you bend your wrist, there's usually like two creases. You need to have basically the creases of the skin in your wrist above water. So they need to be, what would be camera angle? People can see basically that much of your hand out of the water, both hands out.
If the person is sinking a little bit, but they do their best to keep and not use their hands for assistance, let's just say there's a little bit of room for interpretation for the instructor. If they put their hands in and they start sculling with their hands, that's a fail. I would let students go underwater as long as they didn't use their hands and they could come back up.
If the person is sinking a little bit, but they do their best to keep and not use their hands for assistance, let's just say there's a little bit of room for interpretation for the instructor. If they put their hands in and they start sculling with their hands, that's a fail. I would let students go underwater as long as they didn't use their hands and they could come back up.
If the person is sinking a little bit, but they do their best to keep and not use their hands for assistance, let's just say there's a little bit of room for interpretation for the instructor. If they put their hands in and they start sculling with their hands, that's a fail. I would let students go underwater as long as they didn't use their hands and they could come back up.
But again, there was a little bit of a deviation. By the book, hands out of the water, five minutes, vertical treading configuration. Yeah, pure hell. Considered to be the easiest evolution in BUDS.
But again, there was a little bit of a deviation. By the book, hands out of the water, five minutes, vertical treading configuration. Yeah, pure hell. Considered to be the easiest evolution in BUDS.