View allAll Photos Tagged Exercise
ARC10383/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
U.S. forces resupply area at the south end of Sand Lake. A Nodwell #900 and other test vehicles can be seen.
17 Feb 62
Capt. Charles Beresford
Pictorial Branch, USARAL Spt. Cmd.
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AT465
U.S. Coast Guard Fireman Faith Gosselin, a crewmember assigned to USCGC Sycamore (WLB 209), starts a firefighting pump during an exercise onboard French Navy patrol vessel FNS Fulmar (P740) during Exercise Argus, near Nuuk, Greenland, June 14, 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)
ARC2217/AR63 ALASKA
Exercise Timberline
Friendly forces from Fort Lewis, Washington captured Exercise Timberline's first prisoner near Healy Lake. The POW is SP4 Alexander Emgushov. Holding him at gunpoint is PFC Carroll Menear.
13 Feb 63
by Sp5 Hank Hamilton
Pictorial Branch
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AP72
Members of the Multinational Brigade Latvia participate in Exercise WAR HORSE FORGE at Adazi Military Base, Latvia, on 9 January, 2025.
Photo Credit: NATO Multinational Brigade Latvia Imagery
Members of HMCS TORONTO’s Air Detachment assist a French airman with attaching the fuel nozzle to the French NH-90 helicopter during Exercise CUTLASS FURY 21, off the east coast of Canada on 14 September 2021.
Photo: MCpl Manuela Berger, Canadian Armed Forces Photo
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Des membres du détachement aérien du NCSM TORONTO aident un membre de la Force aérienne française à fixer la buse de ravitaillement à l’hélicoptère français NH-90 au cours de l’exercice CUTLASS FURY 21, au large de la côte Est du Canada, le 14 septembre 2021.
Photo : Cplc Manuela Berger, Forces armées canadiennes
Diabetes is a chronic disease suffered by people across the world. According to a statistic, the diabetic population has increased by 84% from 1995 to 2005.
Sgt. 1st Class Matthew Mulac, an infantryman from Madison, Wisconsin, assigned to Company B., 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, stands for a photograph while serving as a range safety noncommissioned officer during infantry squad situational training exercise (STX) at Fort Carson, Colorado, June 3, 2020. The 4th Bn., 9th Inf. Reg executed the STX training as part of battalion-wide training events to prepare for future operations and Army requirements while also adhering to proper social distancing practices in accordance with policies and guidance in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Daniel Parker)
This is a random exercise in my display of emotions. I have no idea what prompted this, but it worked out well.
Airmen from the 96th Medical Group pull a simulated victim out of the line of fire during a casualty care scenario of Tactical Combat Casualty Care training Nov. 17 at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. The week-long, required medical course culminated in a fire fight, casualty care and extraction scenario where Airmen applied what they learned in the classroom to hands-on combat training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Samuel King Jr.)
Fire Service and Mountain Rescue Teams on a rescue training exercise at the Tees Barrage White Water Course, Stockton on Tees, UK
Mr. Earl R. Miller, U.S. Ambassador to the People’s Republic of Bangladesh provides remarks during the closing ceremony for the Bangladesh Disaster Response Exercise and Exchange (DREE) 2021, hosted by The Bangladesh Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief (MoDMR), Bangladesh Armed Forces Division (AFD), and the United States Army Pacific (USARPAC), at Dhaka, Bangladesh on Oct. 28, 2021. The DREE brings together over 30 countries working in partnership (or collaboration) with government and non-government organizations to compare best practices for disaster relief, culminating in a table-top exercise to simulate a large-scale Earthquake response. (National Guard photo by Master Sgt. John Hughel, Oregon Military Department Public Affairs)
Finally I have taken a photoshop beginners class and I am absolutely delighted with what I have learned... From now on I can improve my pictures... yeah!
I usually do crunches before bedding time. It’s quite effective for taking away the love handle. And exercise before bedding time could help me with my sleep.
Petty Officer 2nd class (PO2) Rebecca O'Keefe of Fleet Diving Unit Atlantic goes over some last minute dive instructions during Exercise TRADEWINDS 22 in Belize City, Belize on 10 May 2022.
Please credit: MCpl Matthew Tower, Canadian Forces Combat Camera, Canadian Armed Forces Photo
Stretch is still in fashion and always will be when it comes to quality exercise wear. Now your spa or club can offer your own line of perfect fit exercise wear. Let us know how we can help you.
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."
ARC2057/AR63 ALASKA
Exercise Timberline
Aggressor vehicles of the 4th BG, 23rd Inf are shown prior to Exercise Timberline.
9 Feb 63
by Sp4 King
Pictorial Branch
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AP72
Members of the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment take part in Exercise RAPID RESPONSE with members of the Polish Army in Bathurst, New Brunswick from March 7 to 12, 2022.
U.S. Air Force Col. Quaid Quadri, the 169th Fighter Wing commander, briefs senior leadership in the South Carolina Air National Guard on strategic exercise protocols at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, South Carolina, May 31, 2023. The 169th FW is participating in Exercise PALMETTO PRESSURE, an innovative Phase One type exercise designed to test the wing’s ability to rapidly execute combat airpower for a downrange contingency while simultaneously supporting a homeland defense mission. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Airman 1st Class Danielle Dawson)
Governor Kay Ivey participated in the Alabama Emergency Management Agency’s routine hurricane exercise Tuesday, May 14, 2019 in Clanton, Ala. This year’s exercise will be for “Hurricane Yvonne” – a Category 4, directed at Alabama’s Gulf Coast. During her visit to AEMA, she will also briefly visit with emergency management staff and make a few remarks during a press conference. (Governor's Office/Hal Yeager)
ARC2097/AR63 ALASKA
Exercise Timberline
L-R Sp4 May, PFC MacDonald, SP4 Christiansen and SFC Erikson (mess Sgt) are shown serving chow to PFC Spendolini from Hq and Hq during Exercise Timberline.
11 Feb 63
by Sp4 Kenneth Puckett
Pictorial Branch
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AP72
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."
Members of the Ombudsman corporation finish packing their military gear in preparation for Exercise Collaborative Spirit in Y-101, Garrison Petawawa..
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Photo: Corporal D. Salisbury.
PA2013-0133-54
A German medic 'treats' a wounded child during a U.S. Army Garrison Heidelberg Force Protection/Consequence Management Exercise held Oct. 18 at the Defense Distribution Depot Europe in Germersheim, with command and control from Heidelberg. The exercise simulated a vehicle- borne explosive detonation on the installation. The vehicle held eight passengers. The Germersheim Fire Department responded along with members of the local German volunteer fire department, Rotes Kreuz and Polizei. (photo by Mitchell Lee, USAG Heidelberg)
Self-identified female Canadian Rangers and Junior Canadian Rangers from 5 CRPG take part in Exercise BREAKTHEBIAS from 9-14 March 2022 at Max Simms Lion Camp near Gander, Newfoundland, and Labrador. In this photo members on Exercise BREAKTHEBIAS participate in/ learn Knots, tool safety, shelters, first aid.
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Des femmes faisant partie des Rangers canadiens et des Rangers juniors canadiens du 5 GPRC participent à l’exercice BREAKTHEBIAS, qui se déroule du 9 au 14 mars 2022 au camp Lion Max Simms, près de Gander (Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador). Dans cette photo, les participantes à l’exercice BREAKTHEBIAS assistent à une activité portant sur les nœuds, la sécurité relative aux outils, les abris, les premiers soins.
Photo by: Master Corporal Kurt Smith - 1st Battalion, The Royal Newfoundland Regiment
Governor Kay Ivey participated in the Alabama Emergency Management Agency’s routine hurricane exercise Tuesday, May 14, 2019 in Clanton, Ala. This year’s exercise will be for “Hurricane Yvonne” – a Category 4, directed at Alabama’s Gulf Coast. During her visit to AEMA, she will also briefly visit with emergency management staff and make a few remarks during a press conference. (Governor's Office/Hal Yeager)
An California Air National Guard 129th Rescue Wing HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter conducts a hoisting exercise with the Army Corps of Engineers’ vessel John A. B. Dillard near Point Reyes, California, April 25, 2023. Following the simulated explosion, the John A. B. Dillard would request an airborne evacuation of its passengers who would be hoisted by helicopter to a triage center established at Coast Guard Training Center Petaluma. (U.S. Coast Guard Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Hunter Schnabel)