Originally Posted by spmetla
Guard duty is a very variable experience. Some units train well and morale is high while others kill weekend drill time thinking up training tasks at last minute. I've seen and experienced both and being in the former makes you happy to go and do something different once a month while the later makes you feel like you're just throwing another weekend away. It's nice in a way because you really only see the guys there once a month so most everyone is happy to work together and try and accomplish something.
Right now my guard unit has switched from infantry to cav scout and that caused a lot of peole to not reenlist, so where my platoon used to be a full strength infantry platoon now we're happy to have maybe seven or eight guys in formation.
If you're considering it for the college money, it is a good help. Tuition assistance and the GI Bill help a lot when it comes to paying for schooling. You need to bear in mind though that all guard units are very likely to get deployed, my unit went to Iraq in 2005 and rumor has it we're gonna get called up end of next year to go back to Iraq in 2009.
If you talk to the recruiter be sure to ask when the next weekend drill is that way you can come by and see the unit doing stuff. Be sure to ask a few people what it's like, from lowly privates to the CO.
Also, if you do decide to sign up, try and pick a good MOS (military occupational specialty) and one that is still being used. If you pick something like air defense, while it's an important job in a conventional war, it's just not being used the way it's supposed to be used right now so you'd end up guarding towers or manning gates. Much better to get technical job that can help on the civilian side or to get a combat job that gets you off your butt and doing something.
Last thing, if you sign up, the recruiter has all sorts of perks to give out and with recruiting the way it is there should be no excuse for you not to get them. Ask about the different schools such as air assault, airborne, scuba etc..
By the way, I'm an E4 Specialist with a 19D (Cavalry Scout) MOS.