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    Behind every mission, a meal: Dobbins Airmen sustain readiness during Exercise Patriot Medic 2026

    94th Airlift Wing Supports Patriot Medic

    Photo By Tech. Sgt. Gage Daniel | Senior Airman James Cawley, 94th Force Support Squadron food services technician,...... read more read more

    GULFPORT AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES

    07.09.2026

    Courtesy Story

    94th Airlift Wing

    Behind every mission, a meal: Dobbins Airmen sustain readiness during Exercise Patriot Medic 2026

    GULFPORT COMBAT READINESS TRAINING CENTER, Miss, -- Before the day’s medical training begins and long before the first patient is treated, another mission is already underway. Inside the dining facility, the sounds of ovens, serving pans and hurried footsteps fill the kitchen as Reserve Airmen work against the clock, preparing hundreds of meals that sustain one of the Air Force Reserve's premier medical readiness exercises.

    Exercise Patriot Medic 2026, which took place at various sites throughout lower Mississippi from 25 May - 22 June brought together Air Force Reserve and Army medical personnel to strengthen deployment readiness through realistic field training focused on trauma care, patient evacuation and expeditionary medicine. While medical professionals sharpen lifesaving skills in austere environments, Reserve Airmen assigned to the 94th Force Support Squadron ensure those training on the front lines remain fueled and ready to perform.

    "It's really tiring, and it's very hectic here," said A1C Angela Romero, 94th Force Support Squadron food services technician. "It's always chaotic. You're always running around, but at the end of the day, I feel like it's been a great learning experience. We are with a large variety of people; there are technical sergeants, staff sergeants, senior airmen and all the above, but everybody really comes together to help one another out. We've been working day in and day out and I feel like we've been feeding 600 people very, very smoothly."

    Throughout the exercise, Force Support Airmen assigned to the 94th Airlift Wing served hundreds of meals daily to Airmen and Soldiers participating in Patriot Medic. The Air Force team also backfilled the dining facility mission during the opening days of the exercise until Army personnel arrived, requiring early morning and late evening hours to keep meals moving without interruption.

    "It's a little crazy because it's such a larger number than what we're used to," said Amn. Gustavo Barroso, 94th FSS food services technician. “In the kitchen you're running back and forth, and the atmosphere is really like, ‘Okay, we really need to get these meals out.’ There’s a lot of urgency in here to get everything out because we have a lot of mouths to feed and a lot of people to serve.”

    For many 94th FSS Airmen, large-scale food service operations are not part of their routine duties. Supporting Patriot Medic required them to quickly adapt, practice unfamiliar tasks and rely on one another to accomplish the mission while maintaining the pace needed to support hundreds of personnel.

    "To freshen up I would ask questions on my downtime,” said Barroso. “I would try to do some research on certain things that would help me in the kitchen. I would just ask questions and try to get as much information as possible to complete the mission."

    While their work often takes place behind the scenes, every meal directly contributes to the readiness of those participating in the exercise. Proper nutrition enables medics, support personnel and joint partners to continue training in demanding environments where the goal is to prepare for future deployments.

    "Serving makes me feel good about myself," said Romero. "Realistically everyone would be eating MREs day in and day out if we weren't back here from 3 a.m. until 10 p.m. making all these meals for everyone. It makes me really feel good about myself. I'm proud of the people in the back because we are all tired and exhausted, but every shift, we get it done, and we feel good about it."

    That commitment extended beyond simply preparing food. Long hours, unfamiliar responsibilities and the physical demands of working in a busy kitchen became another opportunity to strengthen resilience.

    "What I've learned while I've been out here is to push through adversity and have real resilience," said Barroso. "It gets tough and you get tired, but in the same way our Soldiers, our personnel and our Airmen are out there fighting and can't falter, we in the kitchen can't falter because we contribute a lot to the mission. If we don't feed our service members and give them the proper nutrition, they won't be able to complete the mission. Our mission is to help them complete the mission.”

    The exercise also reinforced lessons Airmen plan to bring back to Dobbins, from improving communication and teamwork to learning new skills outside their comfort zones. More importantly, it highlighted the shared responsibility every Airman has in ensuring mission success, regardless of career field.

    "I want to bring back resilience,” said Romero. “I'm so tired, but we still wake up and we still come to work. They put me in baking here, and I'd never baked a day in my life, and I feel like that's something I'll take back. I’ll also take back new communication skills because we obviously have to talk, meet new people and get accommodated to certain things.”

    Despite the demanding schedule, both Airmen said the experience strengthened the bonds within the team, where everyone stepped in to help one another and no one was left to carry the workload alone.

    "I wish they knew how hard we worked," said Barroso, who noted that many diners don’t realize the struggle behind the scenes. "It's hot, super hot, and you're getting cuts and burns here and there, you know, and the people walking in, they just see the food. They don't realize how much effort was put into that food to then be served. I wish they knew how much effort we put into the food that they see and eat."

    While Patriot Medic 2026 prepares Reserve medical professionals to deliver lifesaving care in deployed environments, it also demonstrates that readiness depends on far more than the personnel providing treatment. From before sunrise until late into the night, 94th FSS Airmen sustained the exercise one meal at a time, proving that deployment readiness is built not only through training, but through the Airmen whose work behind the scenes makes that training possible.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.09.2026
    Date Posted: 07.09.2026 11:08
    Story ID: 569623
    Location: GULFPORT AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, MISSISSIPPI, US

    Web Views: 12
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