They might like the protection and the loophole saw
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Because the deep trenches protected them from bullets and shell fragments that were fired at the soldiers and so that the soldiers could be be seen (as targets).
in the trenches
the trenches affected the soldiers during ww1 ww2 by supplying some cover for the soldiers and they were also a living hell because they held water and were often soaked by blood from fallen comrades
No, they either had to wait out the 'shellings' to be relieved by another squad, or to retreat. Often times soldiers would have a piece of bread in their pouch, which they could eat. Remember, No Man's land was the area between the trenches, so nobody was alive there anyways. You might mean in the trenches, on the front lines, for which the answer is the same.
Smoke mad blunts