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Students at Matoaca Elementary School in Ettrick, Va., perform push-ups when Soldiers made a special trip to the school. On behalf of their deployed fellow Soldiers, 80th Training Command troops visited the school in December 2009 to say thank you for the holiday care packages the children and staff collected, packaged and shipped to those deployed overseas. Photo by Staff Sgt. Anne W. Lewis
Holly, of decor8 fame, sent me the BEST care package! It includes a thoughtful little card (and a helpful little business card), a tiny blue flower dish, heart candies, three loverly-smelling candles, and a set of boxed cards that are almost too pretty to use. Oh, and the craZy white yarn gift tag is so fun. Thanks, Holly!
flowers. fudgesicles. soup. jello. people and tiger beat magazines... all the pieces of the heather care package puzzle.
Sending off a care package for Moose. It's not that hard, just pick up a B4 mailing box, stuff it full of things and as long as the package is under 2Kg it will be shipped at no cost.
What you put in them depends on the recipient. Check here for suggestions. I'd got an unscheduled call from Moose, and "Bricks" was the thing he needed most so I sent this pack with coffee & some bricks, then followed up with another 1Kg Vita Brit pack the next day.
You can find out the technical details here (ADF) or here or here.
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A Matoaca Elementary School student is in the middle of snacking when 80th Training Command Soldiers visit his Matoaca Elementary School classroom in December 2009. On behalf of their deployed fellow Soldiers, the troops visited the school in Ettrick, Va., to say thank you for their holiday care packages the children and staff collected, packaged and shipped to those deployed overseas. Photo by Staff Sgt. Anne W. Lewis
This batch is stacked and ready to go but this isn't all of them! We find with the quantity of holiday mail we ship, it is best to use priority mail "flate rate" boxes and envelopes. We can stuff them and never worry about how heavy they are because we only pay one flat rate.
On behalf of their deployed fellow Soldiers, 80th Training Command troops visited Matoaca Elementary School in Ettrick, Va., in December 2009 to say thank you for the holiday care packages the children and staff collected, packaged and shipped to those deployed overseas. Photo by Staff Sgt. Anne W. Lewis