http://www.nwha.org/Maps/Camp%20Rilea%20map.pdfHere's a link to a map of Camp Rilea. There are some salient features to note:
-> The entire camp is something like three miles long north to south and about a mile wide.
-> There are areas where, and I shit you not,
endangered butterflies live. It's serious doom to disturb the butterflies.
-> You can see on the map where the camp is basically divided into three main north / south strips by swamp. They really are no-shit swamps, like sink in several feet into ooze.
-> The MOUT site is about the size of a city block. Cool for squad defends / platoon attacks size fun and games. Little crowded much past that.
-> There is an Air Assault obstacle course between the main training areas and the MOUT site, and a climbing tower just to the northeast of the MOUT site. Dunno how picky people will be about leaving pellets / dings in the obstacle course. Rilea is one of the few places where Air Assault courses get run outside of Benning (or Bragg, can't remember), so the folks at Rilea were pretty meticulous about making sure folks didn't screw up the course.
-> The actual beach, that is to say the area between the ocean and the primary dune, is public property. Access to the beach, and along the beach, can't be restricted. When the small arms ranges are in use, they post guys in humm-vees to the north and south of the range fan impact area to shut the range down if civilian traffic enters the impact area because they cannot close the beach from the public. Assaults a la Normandy are pretty unlikely. However, there is a lake in the southern portion of the training area that is surrounded by swamps that can be used for amphib operations.
-> There are a couple of checkpoints south of the MOUT site for practicing doing vehicle halts and searches.
-> The chunk in blue marked "cantonment" is the area where admin stuff happens (billetting, UTES / MATES, the PX, gym, Range Control, etc.) happens. Highly unlikely to be "in play".
-> There is a really cool concrete bunker on the northern edge of the camp. The only down side is it faces out of the training area, into a ravine that marks the northern border of the training area.