Do most cadets get their haircut to standard on their own before I-Day or do they wait and have it done at arrival?
Yes of course not for BCT, but there is a nordic team so I was thinking more toward winter sports season.Ummmmm…not when you are first reporting in for summer training. You would immediately become infamous - “that person,” or the next “box boy.”
Welcome to the Air Force Academy. You're doing everything wrong!
For the 1,376 basic cadets who reported for duty at the U.S. Air Force Academy on Thursday, the next four years will be about keeping impossibly high standards and refusing to give in to the temptation to give up. And trying to avoid getting screamed at.www.cnet.com
Someone here will be able to advise knowledgeably on when and where.
Are you allowed to bring skis, and if so where do you keep them? Thank you!
What aspect of yourself were you least confident in while applying? (i.e., academics, athletics, ECs, etc.)I’ll answer questions that I can!
Thank you! I am thinking specifically about the nordic ski team, which he would be joining. Presumably that's allowed for Doolies? I might ask him to reach out to the nordic coach for more info.My DS has skis at the academy, but he's a sophomore. He also has an EPIC ski pass, which is VERY affordable for cadets. He really didn't get a chance to ski until after recognition his doolie year, in March. Now, that could be due to covid. Last year was a strange one, but he didn't even get a ski pass. The first ski resorts don't open until mid-November, so ski season doesn't really get going until Christmas. My advice is to find out how much free time to ski doolie year you may have while experiencing your first semester. If you then think you might be able to get away some weekends to ski, bring your skis when you come back after Christmas.
Thank you! That would be ideal if the nordic team had storage. He will definitely ski for them if it's allowed for Doolies.Yes, you can have skis. No, do not bring them to BCT. Cadets are typically allowed to have a few large personal items in their room (at least under pretty recent cadet guidance) which could include things like a pair of skis or a guitar. There are cadet storage lockers but they’re typically for sophomores and up and they might might not be an appropriate size for something like skis. I also seem to remember that the Nordic ski team had their own storage room for the team’s gear.
Info is a few years out-of-date. Perhaps a current cadet can chime in.
Our son, his dad, and his younger brother all went to the BX and had their heads shaved the day before I Day. On I Day, our cadet got his head shaved again, regardless of it having just been done. Save the money, wait for I Day.Some do. Personally, I would wait. The haircut is part of the I-day experience in my opinion.
It wasn’t hard for me. Some of my classmates found it hard to accept the differences of being a civilian, most notably the fact that everything you do represents the Air Force.How hard was it to transfer from civilian life to a service academy? Also, what kind of stuff do you like to do on your free time at USAFA?
The sooner you stop taking getting yelled at personally, the better!Is there anything you wish you knew before BCT?
For me it was ECs. I didn’t have a super diversified resume but being a reapplicant from AFROTC probably helped. Just remember it’s a holistic view, not just one thing they look at!What aspect of yourself were you least confident in while applying? (i.e., academics, athletics, ECs, etc.)