Navy Seal training lasts about nine months.
? Drowning!? No. If drowning was a requirement every buds candidate would die in training! Navy seals conduct DROWN PROOFING as part of their training aswell as a 50 m underwater swim which has resulted in many people passing out underwater over the years. However passing out underwater in either of these evolutions will not result in drowning! There are always experienced instructors on standby to make sure that kind of thing doesn't happen.
I made it through drown-proofing without much difficulty, although it was super tough for some of the guys. I never saw anyone's mouth bleed. The only way that I could imagine that happening would be if they tried to hold on to the side of the pool with their teeth!! That, along with the bulging eyes, would generate some laughter from your classmates!!
BUD/S is the Navy acronym for Basic Underwater Demolition / SEAL training. BUDS, is the first training step for SEAL recruits; though recruits can pass BUDS training, it doesn't mean they'll go on to become SEAL's, as SEAL training follows BUDS.
NONE! They are the best of the best!
You continue on as an enlisted man in the Navy.
Navy SEAL training consists of the BUD/s (basic underwater demolition and SEAL), a physical screening test at the beginning and end of training, 2 weeks of regular training and a week called "Hell week"
Some of the test that are done in the Navy Seal training include a timed four-mile, timed 1,000-meter swim and two sets of physical readiness tests.
you have to go for training first before entering the SEAL team.
First you have to be in the Navy, then accepted into the SEAL unit. Then sign up for training as a sniper, then pass and get accepted.
Navy SEAL officers can get deployed for as long as 8 to 10 months out of the year, not counting the times that they will be gone for training also.
two weeks