Adapting to waking up early was a hard process to some as their system was not used to that kind of system. Also, being restraint from being active when you want to. The act of sniffing gunpowder, watching uncarted wounds, seeing broken legs arms and heads a little daunted him. Poor food quality as bread was so hard that it could break the teeth of a rat, unfortunately, complains …show more content…
In addition, as if what they went through as discussed above was not enough, the soldiers during the revolutionary war, had to move through out changing their bases all the time in order not to be tracked down by the enemy. In the process of changing they moved and at times, they had to cross rivers and lakes which were obstacles to most of them some of the water bodies were very deep and dirty so much that some had to actually swim. This is where the tall ones had an advantage over short soldiers. Private Joseph Plumb Martin of Connecticut confirmed these cries of alarm in his memoir: "The greatest part [of the army] were...shiftless and barefoot." Martin told how he fashioned crude moccasins from a piece of "raw cowhide" but he soon gave