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25 Dec 2008
Merry Christmas from Tallil
To all my family and friends, Merry Christmas! Santa came 8 hours earlier here than the East coast of the U.S...he brought me a stocking filled with beef jerky, shampoo, socks, stationary, pringles, candy, a cookie, some candy and several toothbrushes!
We have several wonderful boxes of "any soldier" type care packages because the mail hasn't caught up with us yet. I only posted the APO address a few days ago, but don't lock that in yet! I'm in Tallil right now, but my job is going to be in another camp, serving as the Liaison Officer to our Sustainment Brigade.
I'll post more info once I'm safely there... so let's do a quick review of the hops so far:
1) in-processing for 2 weeks at Ft Jackson, SC.
2) Ordnance refresher for 2.5 weeks at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, MD.
3) Join the Kansas 287th already mobilized at Ft. Lewis, Washington. 6 weeks there.
4) Ft Lewis to Germany to Kuwait, where we stayed at Camp Buehring for 4 days (most units stay 10-14 days).
5) Buehring to Tallil, Iraq. Meet the commander and the support team here, and got my duty orders.

Five hops in 12 weeks. And number six is coming!

The Internet is super busy tonight, as you can imagine on Christmas. I'll circle back with more photos and hopefully a quick video on living conditions...and an ingenious way some soldiers are rocking out!
 
ACI , Army Deployment , Family , General
posted by  henry at  13:05 | permalink | trackbacks [153]



23 Dec 2008
Pack 145 in Kuwait
I couldn't leave a camp without getting the obligitory photo with my Cub Scout Support banner! This is in front of a customized T-wall. The 287th Sustainment Brigade painted it when they were in camp just 3 weeks before me. Each unit that comes through strives to leave their mark...So we thought up an "IRRegulators" wall design, but just weren't there very long to make it a reality. IRRegulators have a reputation for not making things happen!
[:yeah:]
 
Army Deployment , Family , General
posted by  henry at  08:17 | permalink | trackbacks [175]



20 Dec 2008
In Kuwait
We touched down in Kuwait City, Kuwait and were off the plane by 7am. An hour later, we were headed North. It's now 3pm Saturday (7am back in Virginia). We've been assigned a tent, dropped our stuff, and set out to explore. MWR has internet spots for 30 minutes at a whack, so here I am!

It started off this morning about 35 degrees as we exited the plane, but we're around 80 right now. Like a summer day in the Virginia Blue Ridge.

There's a lot of sand here. We agree that someone should plant a tree...
 
ACI , Army Deployment , Family , General
posted by  henry at  07:08 | permalink | trackbacks [255]



18 Dec 2008
Snowbound
Well, we're still in Fort Lewis. The Seattle region has received a week of record lows-- mid 20's, and with only an inch of snow on the ground, the military post and Air Force base are both nearly shut down.
Surprisingly for this Virginia mountain boy, the Northwest-most state in the continental US spends most of its winter around the 40 degree mark. The "pineapple express" Pacific ocean currents keep the temperatures warm near the coast. I haven't even seen any salt on the roads-- meaning it isn't worth the cost to have salt/snow removal vehicles for how rare this is.
The impact on us is that our B, C and D bags are long gone. Our "A" bags were loaded & sealed on a truck yesterday morning, and we're living out of our carry-on. So the packing list and planning pays off, because members of the other unit that's going with us are running to the PX to buy toothbrushes, underwear, shampoo, etc.
So we're hanging out, waiting for the word to go. In the mean time, we've at least got the computer lab two blocks from our off & on barracks. I was able to write a little code to help my blog here: apparantly, some dispicable characters are trying to steal my Google juice by spamming me with comments for pharmaceutical products and fake watches. No more. Comments require approval now. Furthermore, until the 100 posts per night die off (really!), I've disabled commenting. If you'd like me to open any of these blog posts for comments, just email your thoughts to me and I'll post it right away.
It's not like I'm turning away legitimate comments, though. With over 45 posts, there are only 6 relevant comments!
Seattle Times reports record weather: As temperatures dropped this week, electricity use spiked as residents crank up their heaters and other appliances work harder. Puget Sound Energy said Tuesday that its peak electricity load Monday night broke a record set in 1998, and natural-gas use broke a record set in 2006.
 
ACI , Army Deployment , Family , General
posted by  henry at  14:22 | permalink | trackbacks [8347]



27 Nov 2008
Please let me know if there’s anything I can do…
Our friends, neighbors, coworkers, scouts and school parents have been very supportive of this unexpected deployment, and two very common responses Lisa and I hear all the time are, “Oh. I’m so sorry to hear about your husband.” And “let me know if there’s anything I can do to help.” While the former might be appropriate for a tragic accident or debilitating illness, it’s just the opposite: I’ve been called to serve my country with the skills and leadership the Army has trained me for. I’m honored to serve. And there’s not much I could want, except to be back with my family. The food, equipment, accommodations are all fine. The biggest issue is that I’m not there for my family. Because as intense as the Army is, it’s got nothing on the Bass family! Lisa expertly handles teaching several classes at the Christiansburg Recreation Center, Den Leader for 13 Cub Scouts, Cubmaster for the Pack of 80 Christiansburg Cub Scouts , organizer for the school “Reflections” creative art contest, organizer for the school’s “Just Run” morning fitness program, serves as the Red Cross’ only volunteer instructor, usually serves in some water sports work (she managed the Meadow’s pool for the last 3 summers, has taught water aerobics and baby aquatics for many years but gave that up when I was ordered to duty). She also substitute teaches, and she was taking a theater class to maintain her teaching certifications and add additional endorsements: Lisa recently took an incomplete so that she can finish some of these other events... Like the Lego contest: Lisa single-handedly coached a team of six 4th graders through the intricacies of programming Lego-NXT robots, plus a research-presentation project on climate changes, a mystery teamwork challenge, and technical judging.

Their team, “The Blizzards” did so well under her leadership that they were crowned regional champions, and darn it all if they aren’t going to the Virginia state competition now: December 6th and 7th at James Madison University in Lexington. It’s a great honor for Ethan, age 9, and the only team member who has competed before. A second team at Ethan’s school also won a spot at the State competition: 7 out of Southwest Virginia’s 30 competing teams were selected to move up, and it’s a great reflection that Christiansburg Elementary School owns two of those seven outstanding teams!
Speaking of honors, she also led the Pack to be top in Popcorn sales for the entire Cub Scout District, possibly the council, beating last year’s record sales by 50%. She’s raising our two magnificent boys, AND taking care of her Grandmother in a managed-care facility. Without a doubt, I’m super proud of her, and if we had a platoon of Lisas in Operation Iraqi Freedom, you would see Iraq as a global economic powerhouse within 6 months! I did nominate her for the “Freedom Team Salute” as a program that supports and recognizes the spouses, employers and supporters of our deployed forces. I understand that their certificate and recognition recently arrived and brightened her day!

The biggest challenge now facing Lisa is pulling off this state Lego Robotics competition. Lexington is 2.5 hours away, and the competition is an intense 2-day event amongst 70 teams dominated by top Northern Virginia/DC area schools. She needs to get the kids hotel rooms, keep them secure, fed and rested, then get to competition first thing Saturday, stress the day-long events, and repeat Sunday. I understand that several of the team parents either don’t want to pay for the event, don’t have the resources, or have schedule conflicts. And the big bombshell: our training unit was just approved for a 3-day pass, starting that Sunday. On a good night, Lisa gets 6 hours sleep. So that second phrase, the “Let me know if there’s anything I can do to help” could be any number of simple things to just let her breathe. If I can be so bold, here are a few ideas I have. Ideas that give her time might be a 3:1 ratio to ideas that take time. Maybe you can add some thoughts in the comments?

    Ideas that give her time--
  • A freezable dinner

  • A ready-to-eat dinner on a planned night.

  • Invite Eric & Ethan to play at your house.

  • Take Ethan & Eric to the new movies being released.

  • Take Eric & Ethan bowling.

  • Take the boys swimming at the Blacksburg Aquatic Center.

  • Go with Lisa to visit her Grandmother.

  • Pick up or drop off the boys at scouts, band or birthday parties ( thanks lots for those who do this already!!)

  • Be the guest speaker/planner for the next Den meeting.

  • “YouTube” the videos and photos Lisa has accumulated, and wants to share with me but gets bogged down in the subtleties of video transfer or Picasa upload.



    Ideas that take time --
  • Take Lisa with you to a day spa (a birthday present I didn’t get to fulfill before Uncle Sam visited)

  • The long January weekend (5 day school holiday) is coming up- team up for a group vacation.

  • Meet Lisa for coffee or lunch.

  • Join Lisa for a workout before or after a class she teaches.

 
Family , General
posted by  henry at  23:21 | permalink | trackbacks [110]





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