An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | June 21, 2011

Deployed Guard members use medieval war games for entertainment

By Army Staff Sgt. Jacob Parker 4th Sustainment Brigade

CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE ADDER, Iraq - While deployed, Soldiers often find new hobbies to occupy their time when they are not on a mission or busy with training. Some play instruments, others read and many play video games.

For some Montana National Guard Soldiers from 1st Combined Arms Battalion, 163rd Infantry Regiment, 4th Sustainment Brigade, 310th Expeditionary Sustainment Command, sparring with padded swords has become the newest unique hobby.

Army Sgt. John Oglesby, a gunner with Alpha Co., 1st CAB, brought his hobby of sparring, or “ditching” with him to Iraq and has since gained several new members to his group of swordsmen.

Their battles take place in a large hole across from their living area and  has been dubbed “the Pit.” The lower elevation of the pit, with its raised viewing area, gives spectators the sense of watching gladiators in an arena.

The foam-padded weapons in the bright sun of the Iraq desert have a shine to them resembling polished steel, although without the metallic ring of metal to metal contact when struck against each other.

 

Oglesby has been sparring for more than 25 years with two international organizations dedicated to recreating the arts of the renaissance and the Middle Ages.

“I am almost 50,” Oglesby said. “I don’t think I’ll ever quit doing this. It’s a good stress reliever and it’s an awesome exercise.”

Oglesby and the other participating Soldiers start their matches with a round-robin warm-up, in which the winner of each duel remains to fight the next.

Following the end of their warm-up, Soldiers are already sweating profusely.  They then move into a two-on-two battle. Teammates stand side by side, using cooperation in order to not expose their battle buddies as they fight and move around the pit.

Oglesby usually has four to six people that join him in the pit for battle.

“I like history and medieval stuff just fascinates me,” said Army Spc. Brandon Thronson, a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle driver. “It makes the time go by faster.”

As stories have spread by word-of-mouth, other members of their unit have expressed interest in joining the group and becoming swordsmen to pass the time.

“My advice to skeptics is, don’t knock it until you try it,” Oglesby said.

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Air Force maintainers with the 123th Airlift Wing, Kentucky Air National Guard, train maintainers with the 139th Airlift Wing on the C-130J Hercules aircraft, at Louisville Air National Guard Base, Kentucky, March 9, 2026. The 139th Airmen are instructors at the Advanced Airlift Tactics Training Center and became dual qualified on both the C-130H and C-130J Hercules to enhance their ability to support the school's evolving mission.Photo by Senior Master Sgt. Phil Speck.
Missouri Guardsmen Expand Capabilities Through Dual Qualification
By Master Sgt. Patrick Evenson, | June 22, 2026
ROSECRANS AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, Mo. – Aircraft maintenance professionals assigned to the Missouri National Guard’s Advanced Airlift Tactics Training Center, or AATTC, have reached a significant milestone by becoming...

Command Sgt. Maj. Dallas J. Scott holds the battalion guidon during the reorganization ceremony transitioning the 2nd Battalion, 116th Combined Arms Battalion to the 2nd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Regiment, June 18, 2026, at Gowen Field, Boise, Idaho. The battalion guidon represents the unit's identity, lineage, and honors. Scott's role in the ceremony reflected his responsibility to uphold the battalion's standards and traditions through its reorganization. Photo by Sgt. Rusty Rehl.
Idaho Guard Armor Battalion Transitions to Mobile Infantry
By Maj. Robert Taylor, | June 22, 2026
BOISE, Idaho – The Idaho Army National Guard’s 2-116th Combined Arms Battalion reorganized as a mobile infantry battalion June 18 in a ceremony at Gowen Field, part of a strategic modernization effort designed to strengthen...

U.S Soldiers with A Company, 1st Battalion, 112th Infantry Regiment, 56th Mobile Brigade Combat Team were introduced to the Infantry Squad Vehicle June 17, 2026, at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania. The Soldiers learned how to properly do preventive maintenance checks and drive the new vehicle and completed a short driver's course designed to introduce them to the vehicle's mobile capabilities. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Jonathan Campbell)
Pennsylvania Guard Trains on New Infantry Squad Vehicle
By Staff Sgt. Jonathan Campbell, | June 22, 2026
FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. – Soldiers with the Pennsylvania National Guard’s 1st Battalion, 112th Infantry Regiment, 56th Mobile Brigade Combat Team conducted training June 17-18 on the new vehicle they will use for movement to...