Tav_Behemoth
First Post
In 1954 the New Yorker published an account of 240 U.S. GIs herding 900 artillery mules (i.e., they were meant to pull cannons, not they filled the distance-attack role in this encounter) from Burma, where they had been designated expendable during the demobilization following WWII, to China, where they were to be a gift to the Chinese Nationalists as part of the anti-communist effort.
On their worst day the group made 7 miles, on their best they made 24. The average day's travel was 16 miles, although at one point they had to enforce a slower pace to keep the mules healthy. Attempts to requisition a truck had failed, so this was under medieval-appropriate conditions (and some Silk Road-era trails that were literally medieval).
Spoiler warning: at the end of the journey the mules came down with an unknown virus. Afraid of infecting the native mule populace and thus causing the immediate collapse of the nationalist resistance, for after all what is a party without mules, the Army vets ordered all 900 mules shot and buried ASAP. First the writer tried to find several steam shovels, but none were forthcoming. Finally, in a very PC-worthy solution, he put about a dozen dead mules in each of the plentiful local gullies and then used dynamite to trigger avalanches for a loud and effective insta-burial.
On their worst day the group made 7 miles, on their best they made 24. The average day's travel was 16 miles, although at one point they had to enforce a slower pace to keep the mules healthy. Attempts to requisition a truck had failed, so this was under medieval-appropriate conditions (and some Silk Road-era trails that were literally medieval).
Spoiler warning: at the end of the journey the mules came down with an unknown virus. Afraid of infecting the native mule populace and thus causing the immediate collapse of the nationalist resistance, for after all what is a party without mules, the Army vets ordered all 900 mules shot and buried ASAP. First the writer tried to find several steam shovels, but none were forthcoming. Finally, in a very PC-worthy solution, he put about a dozen dead mules in each of the plentiful local gullies and then used dynamite to trigger avalanches for a loud and effective insta-burial.