Cool Family Meals images
Some cool family meals images:
IMCOM-Korea leaders take role on fire safety – U.S. Army – Installation Management Command Korea Region
Image by U.S. Army Korea (Historical Image Archive)
imcom.korea.army.mil
PHOTO CAPTION: Installation Management Command-Korea commander Brig. Gen. John Uberti and his senior noncommissioned officer, Command Sgt. Maj. Kevin Witt made a Fire Prevention and Safety public service announcement March 4 that will air on the American Forces Network-Korea to spread the word about fire safety.
YONGSAN GARRISON, Republic of Korea – Installation Management Command-Korea commander Brig. Gen. John Uberti and his senior noncommissioned officer, Command Sgt. Maj. Kevin Witt made a public service announcement March 4 that will air on the American Forces Network-Korea to spread the word about fire safety.
"The purpose of today’s public service announcement is to increase community awareness, "Uberti said before the shoot. " We’ve had several structure fires on Army installations across the peninsula and by sheer luck we haven’t lost any lives, but there’s been a significant loss of property and damage to equipment."
The segment took stage at a badly damaged local family house to build awareness of the damage that can occur in a fire and emphasize fire safety.
"We just want to make sure that people are doing the things that they need to do to ensure that their environments are safe – Not overloading electrical outlets, making sure meals at home aren’t unattended on the stove and making sure we properly extinguish candles when they’re not being used."
There have been four fires in the past three months throughout installations across the region and the shoot was at one of the actual sites. A mach scenario was used for the PSA but the situation was real.
"It’s very important that we get the word out about fire safety," Witt said. "We’ve had a rash of fires and we have really got to get the word out."
IMCOM-Korea is responsible for structures across the peninsula and Uberti said fire safety is a key concern. "This includes Soldiers’ barracks, Army family housing, all of the office buildings that people work in – So again, we need everybody’s help to ensure that the places they live and work in are safe."
U.S. Army Photo by Debbie Hong
Cleared for Public Release
West Casey Chapel reopens after stem-to-stern overhaul
Image by U.S. Army Garrison Casey
By Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Troth
jefferey.l.troth.mil@mail.mil
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – The West Casey Chapel, which had been closed for 10 months for a stem-to-stern renovation, is open again and with an all-new look.
Services resume Sept. 16 at the chapel, which sits on a hill overlooking Camp Casey’s Exchange and commissary area. The renovation began last November.
Protestant services are scheduled for 9:30 a.m., Catholic Mass for 11 a.m. and the Latter Day Saints service for 4 p.m.
To mark its reopening, officials held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Sept. 7 with more than 60 Soldiers, civilians and family members present.
Among those at the ceremony was Chaplain (Col.) David Waters, U.S. Forces Korea chaplain, who said the renovation had been so thoroughgoing the chapel was “close to being a brand new facility.”
“The Second to None is so blessed to have a new facility like this,” Waters said, in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division, whose motto is “Second to None.”
“The old chapel, the old building had a very low ceiling and there was a lot of leakage here and there,” said Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Suk-jong Lee, U.S. Army Garrison Red Cloud and Area I chaplain.
“Inside, the roof has been raised and it is very bright in the sanctuary, with a nice contemporary style,” Lee said.
Besides the chapel’s new look, worshippers will feel the change in another way too.
The windows in the old chapel weren’t sealed and the air conditioner didn’t work properly, said Lee. That left the congregation shivering in their seats in winter and sweating in summer.
But awaiting them in the renovated chapel is a new air-conditioning and heating system.
Not everything from the old building was carted away. The bronze reliefs of the Stations of the Cross were saved and members of the Catholic congregation made new frames for them.
Before the renovation the sanctuary was the chapel’s only place worshippers could meet after services.
“So after their service they would have to move out for the next service,” said Lee.
The renovations have changed all that by adding an activity room to the chapel. The large room has movable walls that can divide it into three rooms.
Also new is a full-size kitchen, with an industrial-size refrigerator and stove.
“So, the congregation can cook together and eat together,” something that’ll be especially helpful if they want to share a Thanksgiving or Christmas meal, Lee said.
“Now we can have things happening at the same time at the chapel,” said Spec. Amber Jones, a worshipper assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 70th Brigade Support Battalion. “We can have Bible study going on and choir rehearsal going on.”
The renovation project was not limited to the chapel itself. A playground and paved parking lot was added to the chapel grounds.
“This is a place where people can really congregate,” said Lee. “They can claim this as their home and hopefully we can build a bigger family within this chapel facility.”
Cool Family Meals images
A few nice family meals images I found:
Z9P_5884
Image by dave massie
Meal with a Maori family
Z9P_5882
Image by dave massie
Meal with a Maori family
USS Emory S. Land Volunteers at Ronald McDonald House
Image by U.S. Embassy Australia
USS Emory S. Land volunteers at Ronald McDonald House, Nedlands on September 3 and 5, 2024 to prepare meals for sick children and their families.
Nice Family Meals photos
Check out these family meals images:
Smoked duck
Image by kattebelletje
Thanksgiving Dinner
Image by Pictures by Ann
tomatoes
Image by Muffet
Is food for the body somehow different?
I have always loved food, perhaps even more than flowers. My whole family enjoyed food. In fact, on my grandmother’s deathbed, her last conversation with my father was to ensure that he knew all the ingredients to all the family recipes. (Sometimes my grandmother would withhold the identify of one ingredient so that no one else could make a dish exactly as she did.)
My mother’s family was Polish and Russian, and my father’s family was Spanish and Mongolian, so I had a pretty broad exposure to food as a kid. In addition, we owned a large farm, which produced all sorts of fresh produce. One of my happier memories as a child was sitting down to special summer meals, which consisted of one fresh crop of food: strawberries, for example, or corn. We would gorge ourselves on the fresh produce to celebrate its arrival.
However, as much as I love food, I didn’t really think about photographing it, except to document certain recipes. Occasionally, I might take a snapshot of something that I bought, but such pictures were usually spur of the moment activities that took place only because my camera was near where I unloaded the groceries.
Nice Family Meals photos
Check out these family meals images:
HHD JFHQ Family Day
Image by North Carolina National Guard
North Carolina National Guard Families of JFHQ Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment celebrate the holidays in Raleigh, North Carolina, Dec. 5, 2021. Soldiers and their families spent the day visiting with Santa, making holiday crafts, watching holiday Movies and enjoying a holiday meal together. (North Carolina National Guard photo by Sgt. Wayne Becton)
Fist Face
Image by davitydave
Yelp Melbourne Elite Event: Yelp’s Family Dinner @ Mama’s Buoi
A few nice family meals images I found:
Yelp Melbourne Elite Event: Yelp’s Family Dinner @ Mama’s Buoi
Image by Yelp.com
10 of Melbourne’s newest Yelp Elites got to know each other over a delicious Vietnamese home-style meal at modern Melbourne eatery, Mama’s Buoi.
131128-A-TN121-041
Image by 210th Field Artillery Brigade
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Senior leaders from 210th Fires Brigade serve the Thanksgiving meal at the Thunder Inn on Camp Casey, South Korea Nov. 28, 2013 to honor Soldiers and Family members, the centerpiece of the brigade and the strength of the Army. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Kelly E. McKenzie, 210th Fires Brigade Public Affairs)
A father’s journey to safety: supporting asylum seekers and refugees in Egypt
Image by EU Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid
What I miss about Sudan,” Esmat reflects, “is that everyone is considered family, all the time.”
In his homeland, neighbours shared meals, laughter, and prayers.
Here, the foreign streets are a blur of faces, each lost in their own struggle.
The mosque, once a sanctuary, now feels distant for Esmat.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Garineh Antablian).