In my opinion, the figure of 96% success rate of passing BMQ is correct. But theres a further
context to it.
This is not to scare anyone and it always best to
speak to your recruiter at the CFRC if you have any questions.
Out of every BMQ platoon, there are a few who do not pass the original course. Most of these are "recoursed", or placed on a personnel
awaiting training platoons (PAT) until the next
course starts up. Some seek a voluntary release,
others may get a medical discharge if they cannot
continue with training.
As an example, the platoon I was on started with
58 recruits and gradutated 48.
We had:
1 VR; 1 guy was placed on PAT because of a torn
tendon in the knee and could not meet PT
standards; 1 guy inflamed a previous elbow tendonitis problem and couldn‘t perform push-ups, he was recoursed; 1 guy acquired a foot infection
and the recovery time made him loose too many
classes and was recoursed; 2 guys were temporarily
attached to our platoon only for the first three
weeks (fitness retest after an injury), 1 person
acquired a foot stress fracture during forced
marches later in the course and was placed on PAT, 2 people failed the weapons handling re-test and were recoursed, 1 person was unable to complete the field exercises due to stress and was recoursed.
Out of the 10 recruits that could not graduate with our original platoon, 9 were placed on
PAT, allowed to recover, and placed into another
or future platoon. I know them and they are dedicated people. They‘ll pass/have passed their
next course.
BMQ is by far a soft course physically by military standards. Yet, it can be quite a
shock for civilians/recruits pschologically (sp). I guess most members on the forum may have similar
experiences.
If you don‘t do silly things like horse around,and keep healthy, get as much sleep as possible, take care of your feet, watch that you don‘t inflame training injuries, you should be
alright and avoid missing too many classes.
This is not to say everyone won‘t have problems.
Blisters, pulled muscles, sore feet, chronic fatigue, physical fatigue will effect everyone
at least sometime in the course. Just keep
going and maintain a sense of humour.