Nice pics
Thanks man, I'll post some more tomorrow.
Just a SEAL wannabe...being a SEAL wannabe I guess.
In post #280, what is that thing he is swimming behind if anyone can answer?/quote]
ETA ... In the first pic...
I was just trying to post some cool pics, didn't know some of them were reposts.Ok I'll bite: are you posting random photos or is there a method to the madnes?
'Cause some have been posted, others are not SEALs.
No biggie, sorry I acted out
Not my lane anywho.
If I just could make a suggestion: try getting some infos on where, or when they were made.
I just makes for a more informative gallery. Since most of them have been released by the DoD anyway.
Just to reiterate for everyone's benefit:
If the photos are within the last decade, they need to be accompanied by a link to a .mil website OR they need to be edited for PERSEC (names and faces blacked out).
CAMPO, Calif. (Oct. 19, 2007) - A team of four SEAL trainees prepare to breach a room during a SEAL qualification training exercise. Students spend two weeks learning basic skills to secure a room from possible threats before earning their coveted SEAL trident pin. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Christopher Menzie
CAMPO, Calif. (Oct. 19, 2007) - Four Navy SEAL trainees practice a room breaching exercise as part of SEAL qualification training instruction. Students spend two weeks learning the basic methods for entering a room and securing it from possible threats. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Christopher Menzie
A US sailor in civilian clothing secures the Tawi-Tawi capitol during the opening ceremony of the USNS Mercy's arrival in Bongao, Tawi-Tawi 11 June 2006. The US navy hospital ship is on its last leg of its humanitarian mission in the Philippines after serving two week in Zamboanga and Jolo respectively.
A team of U.S. Navy SEALs fires on insurgents from a rooftop Friday, April 21, 2006 in Ramadi 115 km (70 miles) west of Baghdad, Iraq. U.S. soldiers patrolling in Ramadi say that enemy contact is so regular, they can make accurate estimates of how long it will take to be shot at after the start of their patrols. Estimates range from 45 minutes for one company to just 8 minutes for another Video
KODIAK, Alaska (April 6, 2009) SEAL Qualification Training (SQT) candidates hike through deep snow during a long range land navigation exercise. The candidates will spend 48 hours in the Alaskan mountains learning how to navigate through the rugged terrain and survive the frigid conditions. The 28-day cold weather exercise taught in Kodiak is part of a year-long process to become a U.S. Navy SEAL. (U.S. Navy photo by Senior Chief Mass Communication Specialist Scott Williams/Released)