View allAll Photos Tagged Exercise.
Liverpool PCT and Liverpool City Council funded exercise equipment in parks, which is specifically designed to help people over the age of 50 become more active
Two Polish Officers, one from the Army the other Navy work along side each other during Exercise Steadfast Juncture, which took place at Okehampton camp. Members of the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC), and various other elements of NATO forces came together for Exercise Steadfast Juncture to certify that the ARRC is capable and ready to assume command of the NATO Response Force (NRF) mission throughout 2013. Taking command of the NRF means that the ARRC will be rapidly deployable and could deploy worldwide is support of combat or humanitarian relief efforts.
ARC10068/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Pfc. Glenn Reecy, a pharmacist from Brewster, Minnesota, fills out a prescription for a patient during the maneuver at the 64th Field Hospital Pharmacy, Tanacross, Alaska.
20 Jan 62
Photo by SP4 Jerry Dickens
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
Exercise Javelin Chase
Brig. Tim Carmichael, commander, 1 Signal Brigade, Headquarters Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (HQ ARRC), hosted Exercise Javelin Chase (EJC), July 8-9. The race was organized to raise funds to support the Help for Heroes charity.
EJC is a 24-hour running race where 8-man teams will compete to see which team will complete the most laps on a one-mile course in 24-hours. The winning team will be the team that has completed the most amounts of laps in the time period. This could vary from 150 to 200 laps.
Each team had to raise a minimum of £250 to participate in EJC.
“This is a charity race to raise money for Help for Heroes, which is a national charity that looks after the needs of injured military serving members and former service members,” said Brig. Carmichael.
He said they hope to raise a total of £5000 if not more and every single penny will be donated to Help for Heroes charity.
The event took place at the sports field behind HQ ARRC Officer’s Mess. The course was on grass and tracks with no tarmac that winds around and through the woods. As if it wasn’t going to be challenging enough to run 24-hours, the rain on opening day would make it a little more testing.
In the 24-hours a combined total of 2426.00 miles were covered, with the winning team, 299 Signal Squadron, Special Communication running 222 of those miles, and 22 Signal Regiment coming in second with 217 laps.
Please credit photographer.
If you’re pursuing a shapely number with a tiny waistline and also substantial possessions, you’ll need to assault your workout regimen with a revenge. Not just is this type as well as number cosmetically pleasing, yet it’s much healthier, as well.
“A ‘level...
www.smartfitness.press/natural-butt-enhancement-exercise-...
14th Mechanized Infantry Brigade Command (Kars), in exercise of the preparations for the 2015 Winter Land Exercise 13-15 January 2015 Sanitary Relief and Treatment Exercise was conducted.
Chapel Point, Mevagissey Cornwall.
Exercise with Looe, St Austell, Mevagissey and Portscatho Coastguard teams.
Francais/french
MG07-0022-05
9 mai 2007
Des soldats de la compagnie C du groupement tactique du 3e Bataillon du Royal 22e Régiment montent la garde sur une hauteur de leur base d'opérations avancée lynx près du village de Spin Boldak lors de l'exercice Maple Guardian à Wainwright en Alberta.
La Force opérationnelle interarmées Afghanistan, roto 4 (FOI-Afg roto 4) a commencé le processus de validation de ses compétences au Centre canadien dentraînement aux manoeuvres (CCEM) de Wainwright en Alberta. Lexercice MAPLE GUARDIAN 07-01 constitue létape finale de lentraînement des soldats canadiens qui seront déployés en Afghanistan en août 2007.
La FOI-Afg Roto 4 est formée denviron 2 500 soldats de différentes unités du Secteur du Québec de la Force terrestre. Lélément principal se regroupe autour du Groupement tactique du 3e Bataillon du Royal 22e Régiment de la BFC Valcartier.
Photo par: Cpl Simon Duchesne, photographe FOI 3-07
Exercise Javelin Chase
Brig. Tim Carmichael, commander, 1 Signal Brigade, Headquarters Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (HQ ARRC), hosted Exercise Javelin Chase (EJC), July 8-9. The race was organized to raise funds to support the Help for Heroes charity.
EJC is a 24-hour running race where 8-man teams will compete to see which team will complete the most laps on a one-mile course in 24-hours. The winning team will be the team that has completed the most amounts of laps in the time period. This could vary from 150 to 200 laps.
Each team had to raise a minimum of £250 to participate in EJC.
“This is a charity race to raise money for Help for Heroes, which is a national charity that looks after the needs of injured military serving members and former service members,” said Brig. Carmichael.
He said they hope to raise a total of £5000 if not more and every single penny will be donated to Help for Heroes charity.
The event took place at the sports field behind HQ ARRC Officer’s Mess. The course was on grass and tracks with no tarmac that winds around and through the woods. As if it wasn’t going to be challenging enough to run 24-hours, the rain on opening day would make it a little more testing.
In the 24-hours a combined total of 2426.00 miles were covered, with the winning team, 299 Signal Squadron, Special Communication running 222 of those miles, and 22 Signal Regiment coming in second with 217 laps.
Please credit photographer.
Army cadets from across Atlantic Canada make base camp in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, N.L., for an eight-day winter expedition challenge, March 14 through 22, 2015.
Photo by Captain Tracy Williams
After a few false starts, Nal figured out how to navigate her exercise ball and explored most of the apartment. Here she looked back to where she came from after we helped her over the barrier between the kitchen tiling and hard wood.
An Air Greenland H225 Search and Rescue helicopter flies over USCGC Sycamore (WLB 209) during a drill as part of Exercise Argus, Nuuk, Greenland, June 16, 2023. Exercise Argus is a joint search and rescue and marine environmental response exercise that includes assets from the United States, Denmark, Greenland, and France. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Ryan Schultz)
Emergency Services exercise at Barton Locks on the Manchester Ship Canal.
November 2004.
Fire services and Ambulance service respond to an aircraft crashing and hitting a shipping vessel on the canal.
Barton Aerodrome Fire & Rescue Service. (now City Airport)
Greater Manchester Fire & Rescue Service.
North West Ambulance Service & EMAT team.
ARC10025/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Members of the 562nd Engineers laying floor for general purpose tent. Tanacross, Alaska.
10 Jan 62
Photo by SP4 Jerry Dickens
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
1st MSC hosts mobilization readiness exercise
Camp Santiago, Salinas: Soldiers of the 1st Mission Support Command's Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment hosted a mobilization readiness exercise at Camp Santiago, P.R., 14-27 March.
During the event, HHD Soldiers completed readiness checks for over 1,000 Soldiers. Events such as this are commonly held annually to ensure that commanders can maintain their unit readiness.
"We try to do this as the units get closer to their available year in order to have them improve their overall readiness and mobilization posture in the event they get selected (for mobilization) down the road", said Gerardo Rodriguez, mobilization officer for the 1st MSC.
Rodriguez said MRXs help units maintain readiness for deployments but they also serve the individual Soldier.
"As part of the MRX ... there are different stations and one of them, one of the most important, is medical. A Soldier is completely checked and whatever cannot be fixed at this location ... the Soldier can go to a private (medical) provider and get that situation fixed and that helps them with their overall readiness",he said.
Soldiers rotate through eleven different stations in total where they are checked in by HHD Soldiers and efficiently move through the station. While the process has been refined over the years at times people still tend to get impatient.
Staff Sgt. Anaselly Ramos, logistics noncommissioned officer with the mobilization team, know the experience can be stressful but to help keep the level of frustration down she leads groups of Soldiers through stations when she sees openings. While each group of Soldiers is instructed to follow the schedule given to them for the MRX, Ramos' method keeps things moving along too.
Keeping track of the entire flow of Soldier traffic is a system called the mobilization plan data viewer.
"It shows all the stations and actually it runs the SRP (MRX) completely", said Spc. Hector Rodriguez, from Bayamon.
"It's tracking each Soldier by station ... you can see how many have completed (the stations) and how many have not",added Rodriguez, who is assigned to the 311th Quartermaster Company.
While the process can be tedious for the Soldiers going from station to station, one Soldier working at the medical readiness station found the MRX to be an opportunity to challenge herself by practicing her public speaking skills.
Spc. Jenniffer Gonzalez Diaz, a traffic management coordinator, who's primary language is Spanish, began giving the medical station briefings to many groups of Soldiers. Gonzalez admits that speaking English is not one of her strengths but her determination brought her recognition among her peers and even the Commanding General of the 1st MSC Brig. Gen. Fernando Fernandez.
"They gave me the opportunity to participate in this activity so I can ... help them in the system with the Soldiers, and I practiced a lot my English",said Gonzalez.
As a member of the the 390th Seaport Company, in Ceiba, Gonzalez recognizes the importance of refining her English language skills. When given the opportunity to refine her abilities when she signed up for the Army, Gonzalez participated in English language courses.
"I improved my English, I practiced my English when I took the class but I knew a little bit of the language because we are Puerto Rico and we are bilingual so we took classes when we started in (grade) school", said Gonzalez.
Gonzalez knows this isn't the only challenge she'll have to overcome in her military career, which is why she stays motivated and maintains a positive attitude.
"The important thing for me is to show people that you are trying, don't get upset, don't get mad if someone corrects you because they are helping you",she said. "If you don't know, ask, so you can learn ... the stuff you learn nobody can take away."
The Women's Exercise Class is held in the Mat Room of the Ambrose Community Center. Classes are Monday, Wednesday and Friday 10am-11am, 12 noon- 1pm, and 4pm-5pm. Cost is $2.00 for drop-in, or there are monthly rates available. For information contract 458-1601.
Soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment, Mike Company from Garrison Petawawa patrol through 'enemy' occupied lands in the Garrison Wainwright training area on 31 May 2014, during Exercise MAPLE RESOLVE 14..
.
Exercise MAPLE RESOLVE is the Canadian Army’s largest annual military exercise, the pinnacle of the Army’s Road to High Readiness Training. Drawn primarily from units of 2 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group from CFB Petawawa, Ontario, approximately 4 500 Canadian Armed Forces members are taking part in the exercise at Garrison Wainwright, Alberta from May 5 to June 1, 2014. .
.
Also participating in the exercise are units from the United States Army, United States Marine Corps, and a British Infantry Company, bringing the total number of troops to nearly 5 000 and making this year’s exercise the largest Exercise MAPLE RESOLVE ever held. .
.
Photo by Cpl D. Salisbury.
Canadian Forces Base Wainwright, Alberta.
PA2014-0084-75
Des soldats de la Compagnie Mike du 3e Bataillon, The Royal Canadian Regiment, Garnison Petawawa, s’agenouillent en ligne défensive au secteur d’entraînement de la Garnison Wainwright le 31 mai 2014, durant l’exercice MAPLE RESOLVE 14.
Photo par le Cpl D. Salisbury
Base des Forces canadiennes Wainwright, Alberta
The most common way that most of us increase our running performance is to run more. This has been proved to not always be the best way forward (some of us find out the hard way!).
Here are a range of StrideUK s running conditioning exercises that will 'injury proof' your body and help get the best out of your running without the common overuse injuries associated with running too far too quickly!
Fore more information please visit www.strideuk.com
ARC10046/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Interior view of the left rear section of the medical supply tent at the 64th Field Hospital, Tanacross, Alaska.
20 Jan 62
Photo by SP4 Jerry Dickens
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
Students and staff from Hartlepool College of Further Education played a major part in one of the largest emergency services training exercises to be held in the north east for many years.
Exercise “Sandpiper” was designed to test the response of police, ambulance and fire services in the event of an “active shooter” scenario, where public safety is endangered by a gunman or gunmen. Although such incidents have recently been highlighted by events in Australia and France, Sandpiper was actually conceived over a year ago
READ MORE>>
Link to follow
There were 4 people out in the grassy area throwing a Frisbee and this little fellow was running from person to person trying to get it... He was really getting his exercise...As you can see he is so well cared for...
A team from the Virginia Military Institute will become the first ever Army ROTC team to participate in Exercise Cambrian Patrol held October 4-13, 2024 in Wales. Considered NATO's most challenging patrol test, this annual event gathers over 100 international militaries – each venturing out for a tactical patrol, pushing the competitors physically and mentally through difficult terrain and real-world scenarios. | U.S. Army photo by Sarah Windmueller