View allAll Photos Tagged Exercise.

ARC 10190/AR62 Alaska Exercise Great Bear Nomenclature plates on the space heater in the base camp, Tanacross, Alaska. 7 Feb 62 Photo by Pfc Henri Hebert, Ft. Devens, Mass. AT465

Sex is possibly among one of the most typical and also definitely one of the most pleasurable activities we could experience in life. Just a handful of studies exist to help us recognize as well as boost the health benefits, we do understand that sex is essential for the survival of the types: ...

 

www.exercisepostures.com/health-benefits-of-sex-exercise-...

ARC10257/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

Taking part in a changing of the guard during Exercise Great Bear, the Army's midwinter war game maneuver in Central Alaska, are Specialist 4 William Vassar, Portsmith, Ohio; Sergeant George ZImmer, Chicago, Illinois; Private First Class Harold Cameron, Mustang, Oklahoma; Specialist 4 Richard Lewin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and Specialist 4 James Curtis, Spencer, Tennessee.

12 Feb 62

Photo by Sp5 George Rice

USARAL IO

AT465

Don't you love these silly warnings on gym equipment? Placed way down near the floor with microscopic print that you could never read anyway? Makes no sense. This is typical at LA Fitness.

BLACK SEA, July 17. 2018. ROS Lt.Lupu Dinescu at the sunset during Bulgarian-led exercise BREEZE18. NATO Photo by WO FRAN C. Valverde.

ARC10145/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

Damage to M-8 vehicle for a line of duty investigation at the base camp, Tanacross, Alaska.

5 Feb 62

Photo by Sp4 Halford

CONUS Photo Fac

Fort Devens, Mass

AT465

Lieutenant-General Hainse (right) the Commander of the Canadian Army and Chief of Defence Staff General Lawson (right) eat a ration lunch at Drop Zone Anzio during Exercise Collaborative Spirit in Garrison Petawawa.on October 18, 2013..

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Photo: Corporal D. Salisbury.

PA2013-0133-110

Colonel Aspirault, commander of NATO Multinational Brigade Latvia receives a briefing during Exercise RESOLUTE WARRIOR at Camp Ceri, Riga, on 05 November 2024.

 

Photo Credit: Corporal Marc-André Leclerc, NATO Multinational Brigade Latvia Imagery

 

~

 

Le colonel Aspirault, commandant de la Brigade multinationale de l’OTAN en Lettonie, assiste à une séance d’information au cours de l’exercice RESOLUTE WARRIOR, au Camp Ceri, à Riga, le 5 novembre 2024.

 

Photo : Caporal Marc-André Leclerc, Imagerie de la Brigade multinationale de l’OTAN en Lettonie

  

ARC10440/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

3 C119s in a triangle formation as they pass over the drop zone for a heavy drop on Healy Lake, Alaska.

20 Feb 62

Sp4 Jerry Dickens

USARAL Spt. Cmd. Photo Lab

Fort Richardson, Alaska

AT465

Hartlepool College of Further Education students were presented with certificates on June 2nd at the police firearms Tactical Training Centre at Urlay Nook to commend their assistance with one of the largest outdoor emergency exercises ever undertaken on Teesside.

ARC10174/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

Troops of Co. D, 2nd BG, 60th Inf. approaching a bridge head in a temperature of 55 below zero, preparing to cross the ice bridge over the Tanana River, Tanacross, Alaska.

5 Feb 62

Photo by Pfc. Henri Hebert

 

Fort Devens, Mass.

AT465

ARC10244/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

Left to Right: Brigadier G.A. Turcot, Canadian Army, Maj. Gen. J. M. Rockingham, General Officer Commanding Western Command with headquarters at Edmonton, Alberta; Col. R. H. Safford, CofS USARAL. Col. Safford greets the Canadian officers upon their arrival to the headquarters of Exercise Great Bear at Fort Greely, Alaska.

12 Feb 62

Photo by SP5 H. J. Hamilton

Spt. Cmd Photo Lab

AT465

THE biggest live exercise of its kind ever held in Greater Manchester – Exercise Triton II – came to an end this morning (Friday, July 16, 2016) after months of intense planning.

 

Around 36 organisations across the region and nationally have been taking part in this major emergency planning exercise which saw dozens of emergency vehicles at sites across Greater Manchester and Chinook helicopters flying across the skies.

  

The complex scenario used was designed to test how local authorities, emergency services and other partners are equipped to tackle a major emergency working together.

 

Participating ‘players’ also included the military, government, health and utility companies, as well as voluntary agencies.

 

The exercise started on Monday, July 11, 2016, with ‘warnings’ from the Met Office regarding adverse weather and from the Environment Agency about the growing risk of regional flooding.

 

The emergency services, including Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS), and partners put procedures in place to ensure that where possible properties and critical infrastructure were protected and the public were warned. This theme was carried on through Tuesday, July 12 and Wednesday, July 13, 2016.

 

To ensure that both players and plans were tested to their full, a dramatic scenario developed on Thursday, July 14, whereby the bank on the Dove Stone Reservoir in Oldham was breached and water cascaded through a number of boroughs within Greater Manchester.

 

This meant that evacuation procedures had to be put in place and rest centres set up. Later in the day, a coach ploughed into the River Tame in a mock crash and a full-scale search and rescue operation was carried out.

 

Paul Argyle, GMFRS’ Deputy County Fire Officer and Chair of Greater Manchester Resilience Forum, said: “Exercise Triton II was a hugely complex emergency planning exercise and I would like to thank all of the agencies that have taken part this week.

 

"This was a very detailed scenario which had impacts across every part of the region and necessitated a full range of partners taking part.

 

"The scale of the destruction and chaos in the exercise was deliberately designed to test the region at full stretch.

 

"We have to do this to ensure we are well prepared to deal with any future real-life event or disaster that might occur – and it is also invaluable that those taking part got the chance to practise essential response skills that would be used during a major incident like this.

 

"I would particularly like to thank all the volunteers who took part in this exercise. The patience and understanding of local residents and communities on Thursday (as response plans went into effect at 'live' sites) was also greatly appreciated.

 

“All players have now been 'stood down'. Our next task is to evaluate how the exercise went, step by step. We will want to find out what worked well and crucially to identify and learn any lessons that could help us in the future in real-life situations. I would like to point out that incidents as extreme as this are highly unlikely, but ensuring we practice our response means that we are ready to respond to a variety of scenarios."

My owner is here to pick us up after our camping stay at Crestview kennels.

Omani Soldiers signal that the bird is landing for a simulated medical evacuation during a joint assault rehearsal at the training area at Rabkoot, Oman, Jan. 30, 2019. The U.S. Army and the Royal Army of Oman are conducting side-by-side training during exercise Inferno Creek 19 by including enablers from their brothers in the Royal Air Force of Oman. Inferno Creek is designed to strengthen relations between the armies. It is an opportunity for both militaries to build tactical proficiency and gain shared understanding of each other’s forces and support long-term regional stability. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Linsey Williams)

www.dvidshub.net/

Physiology of Exercise Lab, Spring of 2013. Instructed by Brian Solberg. Photograph by Jaimie Rasmussen

via Healthy Magpa - massively discounted exercise and fitness equipment bit.ly/12ZQFqR

THE biggest live exercise of its kind ever held in Greater Manchester – Exercise Triton II – came to an end this morning (Friday, July 16, 2016) after months of intense planning.

 

Around 36 organisations across the region and nationally have been taking part in this major emergency planning exercise which saw dozens of emergency vehicles at sites across Greater Manchester and Chinook helicopters flying across the skies.

  

The complex scenario used was designed to test how local authorities, emergency services and other partners are equipped to tackle a major emergency working together.

 

Participating ‘players’ also included the military, government, health and utility companies, as well as voluntary agencies.

 

The exercise started on Monday, July 11, 2016, with ‘warnings’ from the Met Office regarding adverse weather and from the Environment Agency about the growing risk of regional flooding.

 

The emergency services, including Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS), and partners put procedures in place to ensure that where possible properties and critical infrastructure were protected and the public were warned. This theme was carried on through Tuesday, July 12 and Wednesday, July 13, 2016.

 

To ensure that both players and plans were tested to their full, a dramatic scenario developed on Thursday, July 14, whereby the bank on the Dove Stone Reservoir in Oldham was breached and water cascaded through a number of boroughs within Greater Manchester.

 

This meant that evacuation procedures had to be put in place and rest centres set up. Later in the day, a coach ploughed into the River Tame in a mock crash and a full-scale search and rescue operation was carried out.

 

Paul Argyle, GMFRS’ Deputy County Fire Officer and Chair of Greater Manchester Resilience Forum, said: “Exercise Triton II was a hugely complex emergency planning exercise and I would like to thank all of the agencies that have taken part this week.

 

"This was a very detailed scenario which had impacts across every part of the region and necessitated a full range of partners taking part.

 

"The scale of the destruction and chaos in the exercise was deliberately designed to test the region at full stretch.

 

"We have to do this to ensure we are well prepared to deal with any future real-life event or disaster that might occur – and it is also invaluable that those taking part got the chance to practise essential response skills that would be used during a major incident like this.

 

"I would particularly like to thank all the volunteers who took part in this exercise. The patience and understanding of local residents and communities on Thursday (as response plans went into effect at 'live' sites) was also greatly appreciated.

 

“All players have now been 'stood down'. Our next task is to evaluate how the exercise went, step by step. We will want to find out what worked well and crucially to identify and learn any lessons that could help us in the future in real-life situations. I would like to point out that incidents as extreme as this are highly unlikely, but ensuring we practice our response means that we are ready to respond to a variety of scenarios."

ARC10178/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

Side view of a Canadian-built Nodwell with an MRC-69 mounted on it at the base camp, Tanacross, Alaska.

6 Feb 62

Photo by Pfc. Henri Hebert

 

Fort Devens, Mass.

AT465

ARC10262/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

593rd Sig. Co. from Fort Riley, Kansas switchboard van. The 593rd is here for Exercise Great Bear.

12 Feb 62

Photo by SP4 Jerry Dickens

Spt. Cmd Photo Lab

AT465

ARC10187/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

A tire on the left side of a 5-ton tractor cracking due to extreme cold at the base camp, Tanacross, Alaska.

7 Feb 62

Photo by Pfc Henri Hebert

Fort Devens, Mass.

AT465

ARC10186/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

The helicopter landed next to the ice bridge in order to pick up the CO of the 2nd BG, 60th Inf., Tanacross, Alaska.

5 Feb 62

Photo by Pfc Henri Hebert

Fort Devens, Mass.

AT465

Captain Christopher Matthews, from 410 Tactical Fighter Squadron, fires an Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM) from his CF-18 "Hornet". This image represents the first time such missiles have been launched by Canadian CF-18's, after nearly 12 months of effort, providing Initial Operational Capability for the CF-18 fleet with this weapon. The Air Intercept Missile-120 (AIM-120) AMRAAM is a beyond visual range air-to-air missile featuring active radar guidance, enabling fighter pilots to engage multiple targets simultaneously.

An Coast Guard Station Bodega Bay 47-foot Motor Life Boat transits offshore near Point Reyes, California, April 25, 2023. On April 25, 2023 a joint Mass Rescue Operation (MRO) was conducted off Bodega Bay which simulated a explosion and evacuation aboard the Army Corps of Engineers vessel, which played the roll of a cruise ship. (U.S. Coast Guard Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Hunter Schnabel)

RTC Training Exercise in Surrey for St John Ambulance Crews, Surrey Fire & Rescue and Casualties Union.

Lieutenant-General Hainse the Commander of the Canadian Army loads a round into the M777 Howitzer during Exercise Collaborative Spirit in Garrison Petawawa’s Juliet Tower range on October 18, 2013..

.

Photo: Corporal D. Salisbury.

PA2013-0133-107

Leading Seaman Brad Northrup, diver with the Fleet Dive Unit Atlantic, dons his dive gear in order to conduct a simulated mine sweeping scenario in the Atlantic Ocean during Exercise Bold Alligator on October 18th, 2017.

 

Photo By: Corporal Trevor Matheson, 14 Wing Imaging

GD08-2017-0630-006

 

@DND-MDN Canada Copyright

THE biggest live exercise of its kind ever held in Greater Manchester – Exercise Triton II – came to an end this morning (Friday, July 16, 2016) after months of intense planning.

 

Around 36 organisations across the region and nationally have been taking part in this major emergency planning exercise which saw dozens of emergency vehicles at sites across Greater Manchester and Chinook helicopters flying across the skies.

  

The complex scenario used was designed to test how local authorities, emergency services and other partners are equipped to tackle a major emergency working together.

 

Participating ‘players’ also included the military, government, health and utility companies, as well as voluntary agencies.

 

The exercise started on Monday, July 11, 2016, with ‘warnings’ from the Met Office regarding adverse weather and from the Environment Agency about the growing risk of regional flooding.

 

The emergency services, including Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS), and partners put procedures in place to ensure that where possible properties and critical infrastructure were protected and the public were warned. This theme was carried on through Tuesday, July 12 and Wednesday, July 13, 2016.

 

To ensure that both players and plans were tested to their full, a dramatic scenario developed on Thursday, July 14, whereby the bank on the Dove Stone Reservoir in Oldham was breached and water cascaded through a number of boroughs within Greater Manchester.

 

This meant that evacuation procedures had to be put in place and rest centres set up. Later in the day, a coach ploughed into the River Tame in a mock crash and a full-scale search and rescue operation was carried out.

 

Paul Argyle, GMFRS’ Deputy County Fire Officer and Chair of Greater Manchester Resilience Forum, said: “Exercise Triton II was a hugely complex emergency planning exercise and I would like to thank all of the agencies that have taken part this week.

 

"This was a very detailed scenario which had impacts across every part of the region and necessitated a full range of partners taking part.

 

"The scale of the destruction and chaos in the exercise was deliberately designed to test the region at full stretch.

 

"We have to do this to ensure we are well prepared to deal with any future real-life event or disaster that might occur – and it is also invaluable that those taking part got the chance to practise essential response skills that would be used during a major incident like this.

 

"I would particularly like to thank all the volunteers who took part in this exercise. The patience and understanding of local residents and communities on Thursday (as response plans went into effect at 'live' sites) was also greatly appreciated.

 

“All players have now been 'stood down'. Our next task is to evaluate how the exercise went, step by step. We will want to find out what worked well and crucially to identify and learn any lessons that could help us in the future in real-life situations. I would like to point out that incidents as extreme as this are highly unlikely, but ensuring we practice our response means that we are ready to respond to a variety of scenarios."

The HQ ARRC Team are a few days in to Exercise Selva Backstop 2016, in difficult conditions they have hiked, climbed, Via Ferrata and slept in a First World War tunnel that was dug by the Italian Army during the conflict.

 

Exercise Selva Backstop 2016 is an Adventure Training (AT) Exercise in which participants walk and climb sections of the First World War front line, using the Via Ferrata system that runs across the Dolomites, Italy.

 

The team will be climbing in and around Cortina Di Ampezzio, which sat firmly within the Italian 4th Army Area of Responsibility (AOR), during 1915-18.

 

The objectives of this AT is to conduct demanding and arduous exercise which develops the multi-national, multi-ranked participants' teamwork, physical fitness and physical courage, whilst learning about the British 48th Division and the Italian 6th Army experiences during the conflict.

 

(NATO Photo / Sgt Mike O’Neill GBR Army / Released)

 

Please credit photographer.

medical science, along with personal testimony from recovering addicts, is showing that regular exercise can be effective in breaking and managing the cycle of dependence.

 

www.inspiremalibu.com/blog/drug-addiction/how-does-exerci...

ARC2047/AR63 ALASKA

 

Exercise Timberline

Vehicles of the 1st BG, 12th Inf. silhouetted against the winter sun as they move forward in support of Exercise Timberline.

9 Feb 63

by Sp5 Hank J. Hamilton

Pictorial Branch

Fort Richardson, Alaska

AP72

ARC538/AR61 ALASKA

 

WILLOW FREEZE

Heavy drop load, (sequence) Air Ttems Miand, Fort Richardson, Alaska

 

2 Feb 61

by Pfc Arnold Cohen

187th Abn Div

Fort Bragg NC

AT428

On the off chance that you are wanting to set up an individual wellness rec center at home, weight reduction exercise gears are...

 

weightlosstips02.blogspot.com/2014/10/weight-reduction-ex...

ARC10357/AR62 ALASKA

 

Exercise Great Bear

An M-41 tank approaching the ice bridge in preparation to cross the Tanana River, Tanacross, Alaska.

12 Feb 62

Photo by Pfc Henri Hebert

Fort Devens, Mass.

AT465

ARC2051/AR63 ALASKA

 

Exercise Timberline

L-R PFC Stonewall Odom, and PFC Luis Pinzon of C Co, 1st BG, 12th Inf are shown working on their 81mm mortar while another crew operates in the background. Exercise Timberline.

9 Feb 63

by Sp5 Hank J. Hamilton

Pictorial Branch

Fort Richardson, Alaska

AP72

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