Navy Dads

USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74)

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USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74)

USS John C. Stennis: This group is for Navy Parents with children serving aboard the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis in Bremerton, WA.

Members: 109
Latest Activity: Nov 13, 2019

Welcome to the USS John C. Stennis Group

Family Services Page for the Stennis: http://www.cvn74.navy.mil/famserv.html

John C. Stennis Facebook Page


Tiger Cruise Medical Form (PDF Form) : tigercruise.pdf

Discussion Forum

Stennis Email??

Started by Jim Beck. Last reply by Jim Beck May 15, 2013. 18 Replies

Tiger Cruise - 2013

Started by Jim Beck. Last reply by Jim Beck Apr 29, 2013. 59 Replies

Gear Adrift

Started by Jared Hyde. Last reply by Jim Beck Apr 6, 2013. 2 Replies

Comment Wall

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Comment by Will Wild on January 6, 2012 at 9:27am

Just bought my ticket to head out and meet my sailor for the 1st leg of the Tiger cruise!!! 

Comment by NavyDads Admin (Paul) on January 5, 2012 at 3:56pm

I know what with the heightened tensions regarding the Strait of Hormuz that there are worried family members out there...as I find other news items I'll try to keep posting

Comment by Joe on January 5, 2012 at 2:52pm

Thank you Paul for this posting /statement regarding the Stennis. I can forward this to family

Comment by NavyDads Admin (Paul) on January 5, 2012 at 7:54am
Work as Usual for U.S. Warship After Warning by Iran By C. J. CHIVERS
Published: January 4, 2012 @ 10:45 EST

ABOARD U.S.S. JOHN C. STENNIS, in the North Arabian Sea — If Iran’s warning on Tuesday to this American aircraft carrier was intended to disrupt the ship’s routine or provoke a high-seas reaction, nothing of the sort was evident on Wednesday.

The American aircraft carrier John C. Stennis, in the North Arabian Sea, is carrying out its normal operations after Iran warned the ship not to re-enter the Persian Gulf.

Steaming in international waters over the horizon from the Iranian fleet, the John C. Stennis spent the day and the early hours of the night launching and recovering aircraft for its latest mission — supporting ground troops in Afghanistan. All visible indications were that the carrier’s crew was keeping to its scheduled work, regardless of any political or diplomatic fallout from Iran’s warnings.

“It is business as usual here,” said Rear Adm. Craig S. Faller, commander of the carrier strike group, as he watched a large-screen radar image showing the nearby sea and sky cluttered with commercial traffic.

The screen also showed Navy jets flying back and forth in a narrow air corridor to Afghanistan, known as “the boulevard.”

The day’s sorties, not the words of Iran, commanded attention here throughout the afternoon and evening. Returning pilots discussed low-elevation passes to suppress Taliban fighters near an Italian patrol in Farah Province and to help British troops under fire in Helmand Province. The subject of Iran barely came up in the briefings and meetings.

Later, after another cycle of returning aircraft came roaring back onto the deck, one by one, the ship sounded taps at 10 p.m. The crew maintained a normal watch schedule. So began an ordinary night for a warship at sea, no matter the saber-rattling of the previous day.

On Tuesday, the chief of Iran’s military, Maj. Gen. Ataollah Salehi, was quoted by a semiofficial Iranian news agency as telling “the American warship that passed through the Strait of Hormuz and went to the Gulf of Oman not to return to the Persian Gulf.”

The remark was an unmistakable reference to this ship. After providing air support to American troops during the last weeks of the Iraq war, the John C. Stennis steamed through the strait about a week ago, leaving the Persian Gulf to take up station in the nearby North Arabian Sea.

General Salehi, who commands Iran’s navy and air force as well as its army, added, darkly, “The Islamic Republic of Iran will not repeat its warning.”

But the scenes on the ship throughout Wednesday, along with the behavior of the Iranian Navy, suggested that the threats were mainly for popular consumption, not as a marker of imminent confrontation.

On the John C. Stennis the radar images extended to the Iranian coastline. Clusters of Iranian warships, which have been conducting a large-scale Iranian naval exercise, were marked in red on the screen. But the American and Iranian ships were widely separated. They did not challenge one another. Each minded its own business, which for the Americans was a busy day pushing jets north toward the Afghan war.

Late in the afternoon, Admiral Faller noted that the only disruption his crew had felt came in the form of worried e-mails to officers and sailors from friends and family in the United States who had been following coverage of the general’s threat.

Investors were worried, too, and they bid up oil prices. But the Iranian ships did not escalate the tensions or menace the carrier and the warships accompanying it in any way, the ship’s crew said.

“They don’t go out of their way to come and check us out, and we don’t go out of our way to divert from our primary missions,” the admiral said.

Out on the sea, General Salehi’s warning felt, if not carefully calibrated, then at least carefully timed.

Anyone with an Internet connection could have seen from the ship’s Facebook page and its commanders’ ample statements to the news media in recent months that the carrier’s high-seas deployment, which follows a roughly predictable pattern, was winding down. Any casual follower of ship movements could have deduced that the John C. Stennis was probably not scheduled to return to the Persian Gulf anyhow.

As they planned the next day’s missions even as the last aircraft returned to the ship, Admiral Faller and his officers and crew had no comment about the general’s threat.

They referred to what had been said already in Washington: that United States ships sailed lawfully in international waters, and that they would not tolerate any effort by Iran or any other nation to close the Strait of Hormuz.

As for that, they said, everything was normal in the strait that day. “We get all the news,” Admiral Faller said. “We get CNN. We get Fox. We have access to the Internet, and we are voracious consumers of information. We saw those statements. But we also watch the sea. And we haven’t seen anything unprofessional at sea.”

A version of this article appeared in print on January 5, 2012, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: Work as Usual for U.S. Warship After Warning by Iran.
Comment by Lynn Pierce on January 2, 2012 at 2:08pm

Thanks Paul, the videos were great and the information is very helpful. So looking forward to this adventure. Thanks for doing such a good job as Admin. of this sight.

Comment by NavyDads Admin (Paul) on January 2, 2012 at 12:31pm

here is a link to the first page of the series of blogs I wrote about my Tiger Experince: http://www.navydads.com/profiles/blogs/tiger-cruise-the-day-before

 

Comment by NavyDads Admin (Paul) on January 2, 2012 at 12:27pm

I posted this in March of '09 in the Tiger Cruise group area.  If you read form the back page to the front you'll see the evolution of knowledege as the crusie drew closer and closer:

From an E-mail from Eric about Tiger Cruise Prep:

Some quick things to dwell on, pack light, jeans, tees, shoes and of corse towel, flip flops (shower shoes) and kit for the bathroom. Bring something to sleep in, sweats or something as it gets down right cold in the berthing at night. I wouldn’t worry about much else, electronics id leave, just grab camera and phone. Lighter you pack the better off, as space is limited and getting around with a big ass bag is a pain in the ass. Kinda like your going camping just without bugs, fires (hopefully), bears and other critters that eat people. For bathroom id pack your own soap, in a soap container thingy, wash cloth if you like, razor and shampoo . your definetly going to want shower shoes, trust me on this.

Comment by NavyDads Admin (Paul) on January 2, 2012 at 12:21pm

best advice: read through the past posts in the Tiger Cruise group at this link: http://www.navydads.com/group/tigerorfamilydaycruise

also be sure to go through the blogs from the Theodore Roosevelt cruise in '09......also linked in that group

Comment by Lynn Pierce on January 2, 2012 at 11:56am

I am so excited that I was accepted to go on the Tiger cruise and can hardly wait. I read where you need water shoes for the shower but was wondering what kind of clothes.....jeans, heavy shirts, heavy or light coats, sweatshirts, warm PJ.s etc. Those that have gone before could you enlighten me on the best things to take. Do we need blankets or any other linens etc?  Thanks looking forward to seeing those that are going.

Comment by richard v holland on January 1, 2012 at 11:03am

 OK I'm in for the Tiger Cruise. Didn'

t know if they would let this ole Marine on there ship or not. Ashamed about it now but I have said some unkind things about the Navy in the past. Time for amends ha,ha.  hope to meet everyone on board---------

Richard Holland

 

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