Marines.mil
    Home    
    News    
    Photos    
    Units     
    Leaders    
    Marines    
    Family    
Community Relations
    Recruiting    
Bookmark and Share Print 


Spouses come out to play at Jane Wayne Day 


Dateline

Page Content
A typical Jane Wayne Day in the Marine Corps consists of spouses firing a machine gun or spending time in their Marines’ workspaces, but not at Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, II Marine Expeditionary Force. CBIRF spouses gathered here Oct. 11, to get a taste of what their Marines do on a daily basis.
 
 Spouses raced against each other in teams of two by dragging mannequins to simulate casualties, demonstrating what CBIRF Marines must do to extract victims from a collapsed structure.
 
 Spouses also learned how to go through a force protection lane, a decontamination line for CBIRF personnel.
 
 They also ventured through confined spaces in “the pancake house”, a confined-space trainer Marines go through during CBIRF Basic Course.
 
 “It’s easy to go home and say what I do, but until you actually get into an M-40 gas mask, (put on mission oriented protective posture gear), drag ‘bodies’ and go to (the decontamination line), you can’t have a good appreciation for it,” said Gunnery Sgt. Rod Shriver, Company A gunnery sergeant.
 
 Spouses donned chemical protective overgarments, M-40 field protective masks and dragged mannequins, which helped put the Marines’ CBC training into perspective.
 
 “To actually see this, I have a better understanding of what you have to go through to graduate (CBC) and become a CBIRF Marine,” said Dara, a Marine spouse.
 
 The day took on a special meaning for Cpl. Gabriel Reyes, training noncommissioned officer for Communication Platoon, Headquarters and Service Company, who was especially glad his wife could participate in the events.
 
 “They can see what we actually go through … She always says I don’t work,” Gabriel said.
 
 CBIRF’s Jane Wayne Day gives the spouses a unique memory as the only place where they played the role of life-saving Marines.
See the previous photo See the next photo
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NAVY ANNEX STUMP NECK, INDIAN HEAD, Md.-Marine spouses of Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, II Marine Expeditionary Force, race to the finish line while dragging mannequins used to simulate casualties during Jane Wayne Day here Oct. 11. Marines and spouses competed in various competitions during the event and spouses spent the day learning about their Marines' duties., Cpl. Leslie Palmer, 10/10/2007 8:00 PM
NAVY ANNEX STUMP NECK, INDIAN HEAD, Md.-Marine spouses strap a simulated casualty onto a stretcher during Jane Wayne Day here Oct. 11. In a real-world incident, Marines of Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, II Marine Expeditionary Force, use stretchers to extract casualties from collapsed structures. , Cpl. Leslie Palmer, 10/10/2007 9:00 PM
NAVY ANNEX STUMP NECK, INDIAN HEAD, Md.- Cpl. Michael Meyer (right), a rescue technician with the Technical Rescue Platoon, Headquarters and Service Company, Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, II Marine Expeditionary Force, instructs a Marine spouse on how to drill concrete during Jane Wayne Day here Oct. 11. In a real-world incident, Marines may need to drill through concrete walls or floors to rescue casualties. , Cpl. Leslie Palmer, 10/10/2007 8:00 PM