View allAll Photos Tagged Exercise.
ARC10113/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Veiw of a microwave antenna tower at the Mohawk CP area at Fort Greely, Alaska. It is used by 362nd Signal Company from Fort Gordon, Georgia, who are participating in the maneuver.
7 Feb 62
Photo by Sp4 Paul DeNucce
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
ARC10115/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
A Nodwell trailer loaded with a generator (PU 286 5KW) at USARAL Signal bivouac area, Fort Greely, Alaska. The trailers are being used in the maneuver.
7 Feb 62
Photo by Sp4 Paul DeNucce
Support Command Pict Br
Fort Richardson
AT465
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ARC2528/AR63 ALASKA
Exercise Timberline
Moving through the brush and into the attack is a M-41 tank from the Recon Plt, Combat Support Company. In the Maneuver Timberline, held in northern Alaska.
20 Feb 63
by PFC Dave Young
Pictorial Branch
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AP72
150331-N-GN619-031
STRAIT OF GIBRALTAR (March 31, 2015) – Personnel Specialist Seaman Corbette Sam, from Rocky Ridge, Arizona, watches from the catwalks of the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) as the Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Vicksburg (CG 69) and TR pass through the Strait of Gibraltar March 31, 2015. Theodore Roosevelt deployed from Norfolk and will execute a homeport shift to San Diego at the conclusion of deployment. Theodore Roosevelt is conducting naval operations in the U.S. 6th Fleet area of operations in support of U.S. national security interests in Europe. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Kris R. Lindstrom/Released)
Ex Strident Tracer 2015 #EXST15
Participants of Exercise Strident Tracer 2015 "Three Section" move through a damp rainy field during a "Contact the Enemy" stand in the training area of 5 Canadian Division Support Base Gagetown on 24 Aug 2015.
LH01-2015-020-026
Photo by WO Jerry Kean/5CdnDiv HQ Public Affairs
ARC10109/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
[NO CUTLINE IN BOOK.] This seems to be an American colonel greeting members of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry upon their arrival at Tanacross.
29 Jan 62
Photo by Sgt. Charles Shaw
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
ARC10062/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Sp5 James Packer, Motion Picture photographer, from Nanty-Glo, Pennsylvania; Sp5 George Sarandos, a laboratory specialist from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Sarandos gets a blood sample from Packer for blood type comparison at the 64th Field Hospital, Tanacross, Alaska.
20 Jan 62
Photo by Sp4 Jerry Dickens
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
Colonel Toomas Vali, the Estonian Defence League's Tallinn District Commander at one of Tallinn's reception centres as part of Exercise Siil (Hedgehog), 04 May 2018. NATO photo by SSgt Dan Bardsley GBRA OR7
ARC10093/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Men of the 2nd BG, 60th Inf., Fort Devens, Massachussetts, deplane after landing at the Northway airstrip. They will be carried to the Tanacross maneuver area by 2 1/2 ton PCs.
25 Jan 62
Photo by SP4 Jerry Dickens
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
CAMP MUJUK, POHANG, Republic Of Korea – Pfc. Ryan Morrow, a refrigeration mechanic with Marine Tactical Air Command Squadron 18, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, III Marine Expeditionary Force connects a hose to a generator for the Tactical Air Command Center (TACC) that will be used for Exercise Key Resolve here Feb. 19. Marines participate in the embarking process, which includes setting up tents, shoveling snow, unloading and moving equipment in preparation for Exercise Key Resolve. (U.S. Marine Corps Photo by Lance Cpl. Michael Iams/Released)
For this exercise I decided to use an outline I generated based on a photograph of a lotus that I took last month. For anyone in the group who wants to do the same, I used a free online sketch generator at this URL: sporkforge.com/imaging/sketch.php
You have to fiddle with the settings a bit to get more of an outline, but if you keep the resolution and the threshold high it should work. The best images to use should have strongly defined lines without a lot of details or visual clutter.
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.
Members from 2nd Battalion, Royal 22e Régiment advance toward contact during a live fire exercise during the biennial Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise at Camp Pendleton, July 6, 2018.
Photo: Ordinary Seaman Justin Spinello, 4 Wing Cold Lake, Alberta
CK03-2018-0538-073
ARC2557/AR63 ALASKA
Exercise Timberline
The 54th Eng. convoy departs from Gate #3 Fort Richardson, Alaska enroute to the TIMBER LINE maneuver area.
24 Jan 63
by Sp4 Kenneth Puckett
Pictorial Branch
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AP72
ARC10137/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Scene of a tent fire which caused two casualties at the 712th Engineer Co. in the base camp, Tanacross, Alaska.
5 Feb 62
Photo by Sp4 Halford
CONUS Photo Fac
Fort Devens, Mass
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."
You want to exercise. Or at the very least, you want to want to exercise. You know the myriad benefits — weight loss, stress reduction, improved sleep, to name just a few. When you’re honest with yourself, you know you could find the time to squeeze in a couple workouts a week....
Leading Seaman Zack Verdun, Clearance Diver from Fleet Diving Unit (Atlantic), supervises Caribbean divers as they practice a necklace search under United States Army Ship Aldie during Exercise TRADEWINDS 15 in St Kitts and Nevis on June 5, 2015.
Photo: Sgt Yannick Bédard, Canadian Forces Combat Camera.
IS01-2015-0005-048
~
Le matelot de 1re classe Zack Verdun, plongeur démineur de l’Unité de plongée de la Flotte (Atlantique), supervise des plongeurs caribéens qui effectuent une recherche en collier sous le navire Aldie de l’armée américaine au cours de l’exercice TRADEWINDS, à Saint Kitts et Nevis, le 5 juin 2015.
Photo : Sgt Yannick Bédard, Caméra de combat des Forces canadiennes
IS01-2015-0005-048
This was my first exercise for my Jewelry Projects class.
We had to make 20 pieces with recycled materials only. These was my results.
One of my first watercolours, just exercise...
(September 2, 2005, W&N Cotman paints on Canson Montval watercolour paper - 21,5x33,5 cm)
Tech. Sgt. Justin Davis, a tactical air control party specialist with the 137th Special Operations Wing, Oklahoma National Guard, acts as an intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance air asset for multinational military members participating in an anti-piracy exercise on a vessel moored at a shore base facility during TRADEWINDS23 in Georgetown, Guyana, July 24, 2023. This training exercise incorporated volunteers as opposition forces for four nations to experience operating with real people in a high-stress environment. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Brigette Waltermire)
ARC10091/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Sp4 Frank Sicuso, a cook at Signal Company, USARAL mess hall, checks incoming food supplies.
29 Jan 62
Photo by SP4 Bill Bowden
Support Command Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
My great-grandfather, L.C. Bundgaard, exercising. The inscription on the back says that this is either in Omaha, 1909, or Grand View, 1914. Looking at other pictures, though, I'd say it was taken in Greenfield, OH, but I'm not sure on the year. Perhaps 1918.
And he's wearing a belt.
CAMP MUJUK, POHANG, Republic Of Korea – Marines with Marine Wing Headquarters Squadron 1, Marine Air Control Group 18, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, III Marine Expeditionary Force move boxes of chairs and lights to set up the Tactical Air Command Center (TACC) for the use during Exercise Key Resolve here Feb. 20. Exercise Key Resolve demonstrates the Republic of Korea-U.S. Alliance's ability to defend the ROK, protect the region and maintain stability on the Korean peninsula. (U.S. Marine Photo by Lance Cpl. Michael Iams/Released)
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."