Highway
9 runs from Dong Ha on the east and travels west into Laos. From Dong Ha it
is about 10 miles to Cam Lo, a village where there was also a refugee
relocation camp. After passing through Cam Lo the road starts climbing up
into the hills. From here on the area has some very spectacular scenery. No
rice paddies up here, but elephant grass and thick jungles. Camp Carroll,
the main artillery base in the region, was located south of the highway
with a high hill top vantage point. The Rockpile is a prominent rock
formation in the middle of a large valley located approximately 11 miles
from Cam Lo and 6 miles from the DMZ. The highway turns south near the
Rockpile. That is where 3/3's forward area (known by its code name
"Payable") was located. Ca Lu, another
6 miles further south, was a Vietnamese Regional Forces camp near the Quang Tri River on the way to Khe Sanh, which was down
the road another 13 miles.
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Just before reaching the
Rockpile, the convoy took a dirt road to the right and headed north across
the Trinh Hin river (the upstream arm of the Cam Lo river which flows on
the south side of the Rockpile). The road wound around some of the lower
hills until we finally pulled into a position on top of the hill located
between the Rockpile and another long rock formation called the Razorback
Ridge.
Upon
arrival to the area, I realized that I had actually been with 3/3 during
those 2 rainy weeks around Thanksgiving out on Mutter's Ridge, (the north
rim of the Punch Bowl). Four of us from Shore Party were assisting with
directing the helicopter resupply to the position. During that time of
living in 2 man tents in the driving winter rains and mud a news crew came
out to this muddy ridge to film a "typical combat" unit eating a
hot Thanksgiving dinner. Grunts were served their dinner on the muddy north
facing hillside out of insulated "vac-cans", which had been
brought in by helicopters. The reporters were interviewing the diners. This
footage, well edited, was then aired on the Evening News back home.
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