View allAll Photos Tagged Exercise
ARC10226/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Men of the aggressor forces line up for noon chow at the HQ mess in the CP area. Hot meals in the field are quite a morale booster.
[No date or photographer info, but likely ]
9 Feb
Pfc. Jerry Butler
YC Photo Team
Fort Wainwright
AT465
ARC10230/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Sgt. Victor Brown, team leader (left) and Pfc. George Burrows, rifleman, guarding the company area of A Co., 9th Inf.
9 Feb 62
Pfc. Jerry Butler
YC Photo Team
Fort Wainwright
AT465
Her Majesty's Canadian Ship Vancouver deploys members of 39 Canadian Brigade Group for Exercise Cougar Gauntlet in 19 Wing Comox, B.C. on 11 May 2022.
Credit: S1 Larissa De Guzman, Canadian Armed Forces Photo
Exercise COLLABORATIVE SPIRIT 17, which took place at 4th Canadian Division Support Base Petawawa from 19 to 22 September, provided an opportunity for Canadian Army stakeholders and civilian leaders to experience a personal and in-depth understanding of Canadian Army capabilities, equipment as well as the professionalism and skill of Canadian soldiers.
Photo by: Garrison Imaging Petawawa
L’exercice COLLABORATIVE SPIRIT 2017, qui s’est tenu à la Base de soutien de la 4e Division du Canada Petawawa, du 19 au 22 septembre, a procuré à des intervenants liés à l’Armée canadienne et à des dirigeants civils une occasion de voir et de bien comprendre personnellement en quoi consistent les capacités et l’équipement de l’Armée canadienne, de même que de se rendre compte du professionnalisme et des compétences des soldats canadiens.
Photo par
Section d'imagerie Petawawa
DDRS Record Details for Record Accession Number
"N1D0028560"
Accession Number N1D0028560
Document Number D-1512-NEG
Alternate Document Number D-1512-NEG
Title Description EXERCISE CLASS - HANFORD
Number of Pages 1
Key Word(s)
Author(s)
Company(s)
Document Date 04-Dec-2001
Public Availability Date 14-Feb-2002
Steve Jubinville of ADM(IE) fires a Remington 870 Magnum shotgun at pumpkins in the Juliet Tower range, during exercise Collaborative Spirit in Garrison Petawawa on October 17, 2013..
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Photo: Corporal D. Salisbury.
PA2013-0133-75
ARC10285/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
At General Support Area Tanacross, Alaska there is an experimental "pop" tent being tested by Combat Development. During Exercise Great Bear.
14 Feb 62
Pfc. Cohen
USARAL Spt Cmd. Photo Facility
Fort Richardson
AT465
I was thinking of naming this photo "Let's Get Physical" but since that song's actually about sex, it seemed an unfortunate title, given that my cat appears in this picture.
Anyway, today was the third day in a row I actually rolled out my pink yoga mat and did an exercise routine torn out of one of the innumerable fitness magazines I used to pore over in Portland, during my nannying days. The magazine picture you see is from one of my favorite routines, which is sort of inspired by Jane Fonda with a model who does actually look quite a bit like Olivia Newton-John.
Lucy, of course, wanted to get in on the mat action too, mainly because I had rolled something onto the floor and she decided it belonged to her. She bit my hands a few times before I finally decided to shoo her off with my shirt. In the end I got a really good workout in, and I plan to do it again tomorrow and the next day and the next day and the next day.
Airman 1st Class Scott Avery, a weapons loader with the 169th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, S.C., guides a missile on a jammer to be loaded on an F-16 Fighting Falcon jet during a Phase I Operational Readiness Exercise (ORE) Jan. 12, 2013. The Phase I ORE evaluates a unit’s ability to process personnel and equipment from home station to a deployed location safely and efficiently. The South Carolina Air National Guard is training for an upcoming Operational Readiness Inspection later this year. (National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Caycee Watson/Released)
ARC10443/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Display room of combat development at the Officers' Club, Fort Greely, Alaska.
20 Feb 62
Sp4 Paul DeNucce
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.
ARC 10355/AR62 Alaska Exercise Great Bear An M-8 pulling an RTL to thefront lines in order to fuel other vehicles, Tanacross, Alaska. 12 Feb 62 Photo by Pfc Henri Hebert, Ft. Devens, Mass. AT465
Members of the NATO Multinational Brigade Latvia, Spanish contingent, take part in Exercise Baltic Trust on August 25, 2025 at the training area in Selonia, Latvia.
Photo Credit: Corporal Jessey Gagné, NATO Multinational Brigade Latvia Imagery Technician.
This was my first exercise for my Jewelry Projects class.
We had to make 20 pieces with recycled materials only. These was my results.
Today Mandy Willard and I did another walk from Southease up onto the downs towards and through Telscombe and then back via Rodmell. The views were amazing and it was a really lovely walk. The weather was really kind to us so a big variety of images for the day from muck spreading which smelt really good to landscapes and a few birds for good measure. It was an area we will certainly explore more.
ARC180/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
1st Lt. Thomas Flanagan of the 60th BG, S-4 from Fort Devens, Mass., signals for the convoy to get rolling at 6 a.m. on its first leg of the convoy on their way to "Exercise Great Bear" maneuver area at Tanacross, Alaska. Lt. Flanagan is Convoy Commander.
20 Jan 62
Sp4 Bill Miller
USARAL Spt. Cmd. Photo Lab
Fort Richardson, Alaska
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."
Exercise COLLABORATIVE SPIRIT 17, which took place at 4th Canadian Division Support Base Petawawa from 19 to 22 September, provided an opportunity for Canadian Army stakeholders and civilian leaders to experience a personal and in-depth understanding of Canadian Army capabilities, equipment as well as the professionalism and skill of Canadian soldiers.
Photo by: Garrison Imaging Petawawa
L’exercice COLLABORATIVE SPIRIT 2017, qui s’est tenu à la Base de soutien de la 4e Division du Canada Petawawa, du 19 au 22 septembre, a procuré à des intervenants liés à l’Armée canadienne et à des dirigeants civils une occasion de voir et de bien comprendre personnellement en quoi consistent les capacités et l’équipement de l’Armée canadienne, de même que de se rendre compte du professionnalisme et des compétences des soldats canadiens.
Photo par
Section d'imagerie Petawawa
In the Exercise physiology lab students have the opportunity to measure blood lactate production during various stages of exertion during exercise. The main purpose of the lab is to examine the changes in the byproducts produced during exercise. The students are specifically comparing the variations between these byproducts in hot and cold environments. At Cal Poly College of Science & Mathematics, students apply skills they’ve learned in class and experience theories proven first hand.
In the Exercise physiology lab students have the opportunity to measure blood lactate production during various stages of exertion during exercise. The main purpose of the lab is to examine the changes in the byproducts produced during exercise. The students are specifically comparing the variations between these byproducts in hot and cold environments. At Cal Poly College of Science & Mathematics, students apply skills they’ve learned in class and experience theories proven first hand.
ARC 10210/AR62 Alaska Exercise Great Bear Water purification plant at Tanacross, Alaska. B Co, 20th Eng Bn, Shows the front view of 10kw generator used to power pump and purification unit at water point for Ex Great Bear 1 Feb 62 Photo by Sgt Shaw, 60th Inf, Ft. Devens, Mass. AT465
ARC2130/AR63 ALASKA
Exercise Timberline
Storeroom of the 64th Field Hospital located just north of Fort Greely, Alaska. The 64th Field Hospital is part of the General Support Group.
9 Feb 63
by Pfc. David R. Young
Pictorial Branch
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AP72
ARC10433/AR62 ALASKA
Exercise Great Bear
Independent Ridge, 3410 feet, initially provided microwave to both Tower Bluff and to MDM at Fort Greely and as the two forces and their DSGs closed into its coverage area, provided VHF entry for both forces into the microwave system. Constructed by Signal Co USARAL in July 1961 and jointly staffed by Signal Co. USARAL and the 362nd Signal Co. personnel, under the control of Lt. Carl C. Bright, 362nd Signal Company. A total of 1 officer and 23 enlisted men have lived on the ridge since early January.
17 Feb 62
Sp5 Tony Gritz
USARAL Spt. Cmd. Photo Lab
Fort Richardson, Alaska
AT465
Now, for an absurdly small sum, we may become familiar not
only with every famous locality in the world, but also with almost
every man of note in Europe. The ubiquity of the photographer
is something wonderful. All of us have seen the Alps and know
Chamonix and the Mer de Glace by heart, though we have never
braved the horrors of the Channel.... We have crossed the Andes,
ascended Tenerife, entered Japan, “done” Niagara and the
Thousand Isles, drunk delight of battle with our peers (at shop
windows), sat at the councils of the mighty, grown familiar with
kings, emperors and queens, prima donnas, pets of the ballet, and
“well graced actors.” Ghosts have we seen and have not trembled;
stood before royalty and have not uncovered; and looked, in short,
through a three-inch lens at every single pomp and vanity of this
wicked but beautiful world.
—“D.P.,” columnist in
Once a Week
[London], June 1, 1861
Victims of a mass casualty event are treated for injuries from a team of first responders during Pathfinder Exercise 2019, June 14, 2019, held at Camp Rilea at Warrenton, Oregon. Pathfinder is an interagency disaster response event, designed to train and exercise military and civilian response capabilities in the wake of a Cascadia Subduction Zone catastrophe in the Pacific Northwest region. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Master Sgt. John Hughel, 142nd Fighter Wing Public Affairs)
A bridge watch keeper on Her Majesty’s Canadian Ship (HMCS) Vancouver watches as the ship keeps station during Officer of the Watch Manoeuvres during Exercise PACIFIC VANGUARD, off the coast of Guam on August 22, 2022.
Photo: Sgt Ghislain Cotton, Canadian Armed Forces photo
Max Gottlieb of Canada Company fires a Browning 9-mm pistol at a stationary target in the Juliet Tower range, during exercise Collaborative Spirit in Garrison Petawawa..
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Photo: Corporal D. Salisbury.
PA2013-0133-81