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    Commando engineers helocast into Lake Ontario

    Commando Engineers clean up a military cemetery

    Photo By Maj. Angel Tomko | Soldiers of 41st Engineer Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division...... read more read more

    SACKETS HARBOR, NY, UNITED STATES

    09.14.2018

    Story by Capt. Angel Tomko 

    2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division Public Affairs

    FORT DRUM, NY – There was a calm over the Black River Bay in Sackets Harbor, New York on, September 14, as “Commando” Soldiers from 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division prepared for a training event unlike any other they have experienced at Fort Drum, NY.
    These 41st Engineer Battalion “Mountain Sappers” rolled their pants and sleeves, put on life-vests and waited to board a CH-47D Chinook helicopter.
    Next to them, other soldiers were parking and setting up military vehicles which would soon become the hub for hundreds of local children to climb on and explore. Equipment like the M777 Howitzer, a medium tactical vehicle with a remote controlled weapons system and remote controlled mine detecting equipment called “battle-bots” by children and soldiers alike.
    “This day is all about 41st Engineer Battalion providing some realistic training to our Soldiers that they might not normally get, and connecting with our community while doing it,” said Lt. Col. Jim Beaulieu, the battalion commander.
    The helicopter landed to pick up the Soldiers and circled around, conducting a pre-designated flight pattern. The local Sackets Harbor community members and Commando Soldiers watched as the Chinook slowed to a speed of 10 knots and Mountain Sappers jumped from the helicopter at just over 10 feet, into the bay below.
    This is a technique called helocasting, which, in the Army is typically an engineer task practiced during the U.S. Army Sapper Leader Course at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.
    “Helocasting is an effective means of inserting combat reconnaissance assets,” said 1LT Jacob Wilson a 41st EN combat engineer. “Engineers use helocasting to collect information on waterways or beaches in or to prepare obstacle clearance, wet-gap crossings or other amphibious operations.”
    Although Soldiers of 41st Engineer Battalion and the pilots of the 10th Combat Aviation Battalion made the training look easy, weeks of preparation went into the exercise to make it a success.
    “We started planning for this about three months ago and throughout the course of those months, soldiers went through several iterations of water training and jumping from dive boards to prepare them for today,” Beaulieu said.
    Molly Reilly, the Mayor of Sackets Harbor, had been involved in planning this community event since its inception.
    While the helocast was going on, local schools from around the “North Country” area were dropped off to watch the helocast and engage with the 2BCT soldiers.
    Other agencies present for the day included the U.S. Coast Guard, the Sackets Harbor Police, Emergency Medical Services, and Fire Department.
    Additionally, down the street, other soldiers from 41st Engineer Battalion donned civilian clothing and picked up tools to clean-up the local military cemetery.
    “The Soldiers and Families of the 10th Mountain Division are excellent neighbors,” Reilly said. “The helocast training and cemetery clean-up showed how they continue to be excellent community partners. From planning to execution of the event, every member of the battalion proved their professionalism.”
    Sprucing up the cemetery involved lawn and flower maintenance and cleaning headstones that had deteriorated over time. This project was taken on together with the local American Legion Post.
    “There are so many Soldiers from different units from the 1800s to early 1900s,” said Sgt. 1st Class Robert Owen, a 41st EN combat engineer. “We are here today to honor their memory by cleaning up the area which preserves them.”
    This multifaceted day was a way for the local community to get to know Soldiers of the 2nd Brigade and Fort Drum as a whole, but ultimately provide training to the Soldiers that others might never get to experience.
    “As a unit, we have to maintain a heightened state of readiness so we can deploy anytime or anywhere the Army calls us to go,” Beaulieu said. “Today’s training was about finding innovative ways to do that and it would not have been possible without the deep connections we have with our community partners.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.14.2018
    Date Posted: 09.17.2018 15:46
    Story ID: 293124
    Location: SACKETS HARBOR, NY, US

    Web Views: 337
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN