26 Nov 10 Why'd the turkeys cross the road...in Mosul?
26 Nov 10 Why'd the turkeys cross the road...in Mosul?
R/Chris
Chris in Iraq
26 Nov 10 Why'd the turkeys cross the road...in Mosul?
R/Chris
112610 Balad is 'a changing'
112510 Thanksgiving Day Meal
Having a Thanksgiving meal with your co-workers is very similar to having a meal with those distant relatives whom you tolerate for that special day once a year. It simply is what it is so suck it up and deal with it as it will be over when it's over. Anyway, here are some pics. The two chefs are the Commander and Sergeant Major of the Battalion here. In the military, the tradition is for the senior enlisted and officer personnel to serve at meals. This was done when I was in the Navy too. The group pic is me and my coworkers here. The turkey was deep fried in peanut oil and was really pretty dang good and only took 30 minutes to cook. I've never had deep fried turkey until I came to Iraq and evidently it is much more a 'southern thing' to do. The DFAC personnel also go a little crazy with paper-mache. Heck, why 'not' make a paper-mache turkey out of discarded pop cans!?
Unfortunately Thanksgiving and Christmas can be very stressful times for those miss family and are unhappy about life in general. The previous Brigade chaplain use to come around the Battalion office about once a month the say 'hi'. The new chaplain hasn't been around in few months so maybe he's really busy or just has more territory to cover and is needed elsewhere. Between now and Christmas there'll be about one suicide-prevention message a week now through the New Years.
R/Chris
112510 Thanksgiving Day Menu
Today is Thanksgiving Day in Iraq. The Army and Air Force really do a great job for those on base to make sure there is a really nice meal about once a month. As you can see from the menu, Thanksgiving today is no exception. I've been told by the DFAC staff that all meat served in Iraq (on US bases here) comes from the US but fruits and vegetables come from Jordan. Any pies or milk products will come from Kuwait. The cooking staff has to also be careful not to cook any pork or shellfish on the same surfaces as other meats in order to maintain 'halal' (Muslim food restrictions.) And yes, today is still a work day
R/Chris
21Nov10 The war is winding down, I now have to empty my own trash....
17Nov10 More Gerbil Pics from the frontier post
16 Nov Questions
Q- In the photo of the tents, what is the concrete block in the center with the red cross painted on it?
Answer - Just about every base in Iraq experiences some incoming mortar rounds every now and then. Irbil get VERY little (the north is Kurd land and frankly peaceful. Kurds are also not Arab but are Muslim. Balad (in Suni/Shia territory) gets much more incoming. The concrete block is a concrete bunker where people can take refuge should there be incoming.
Q- Why are the showers and toilets called Caddilacs? What are they like? Gold plated or something?
Answer - Why call them Cadillacs??? I don't know. They are important though as having a clean place to use the toilet and take a shower can certainly make all the difference in the world when you're out....camping...in Iraq...for a year...or so.
R/Chris
16 Nov 1LT Ashley Henderson Huff went to Iraq and got a gym named after her
Iraq can be a tough place and it seems a daily reminder here of the things that want to kill me. From working 12 hours a day (or more) everyday to the heat, the snakes, the bugs (which carry malaria and leishmaniasis (according the Vector Control, 1 in 50 mosquitoes or sand flies carry one or the other diseases)) and of course to the family/social separation, most contractors don't make it as long as I've been here in Iraq. Having said all that, I do have it easy. I rarely go outside the wire and I sit behind a desk for much of my job.
For soldiers though, they have to do that soldiering thing and that involves going outside the wire. I did my time in the Navy (long time ago) but still...
The gym here at Irbil is named after Ashely Henderson Huff. Ashley came to Iraq and was killed by a suicide bomber in 2006. These stark reminders are all over the place in Iraq and behind each there is a human story. The camp at Tikrit (Camp Speicher) is named after a Navy Pilot who was one of the first casualties of the war. Anyway, here are some links to Ashley's story.
http://www.legacy.com/guestbook/onlineathens/guestbook.aspx?n=ashley-l-henderson-huff&pid=19372488
http://www.soldierwall.com/wall.php?segmnt=47
http://ourfallensoldier.com/HuffHendersonAshleyL_MemorialPage.html
It also seems that everywhere I've been to there is the American icon, coke. Iraqis like glass over aluminum and Coke seems to be preferred over Pepsi. This is only an observation from the 'haji stores' that I've seen here at Irbil and at Mosul. Anyway, here are a few pics of me and Coke.
R/Chris
15 Nov Here in Irbil (aka Erbil, Arbil or Gerbil)
I finally made it to Irbil (aka Erbil, Arbil or Gerbil) and it's a very small camp in northern Iraq. There are probably only about 100 people here and that includes soldiers, US civilians and contractors and foreign contractors (TCNs). Walking around during the day I might see one or two people out and about. The biggest group I've seen has been at the DFAC and that might be 30 people or so. Anyway, here are some pics. The round structures are tents and inside are cots. Right now I've got a whole tent to myself. The pic with the twalls is the main housing area for permanent residents. Hooches are behind the twalls. The pic with the guard tower is the edge of the camp. Like all bases and camps in Iraq, the guard towers are manned by Ugandans. The pic with the far away shade structure is where I work. I actually work in the white building to the left of the big shade structure. And in the center of camp is a US flagpole. This is kinda cool since only a year or so back it wasn't authorized to fly the American flag. Evidently it was a sign of foreign invasion. Rules change...
R/Chris