The question is entirely too vague to answer. Around certain holidays your going to work more than you would say in December. That too is depending on where you live, is there an "all hands" going on, things like that.
General rule of thumb is your 1 weekend per month, and 2 weeks per year, just like any other reserve, but just like any other reserve, you are subject to activation.
5 hours except for a week in the spring as the daylight savings time change is a week different but all other 50 weeks is 5 hours.
After Coast Guard Reserve Officer Candidate Indoctrination (ROCI), candidates who successfully complete the program move on to Officer Candidate School (OCS). OCS is an intense 17-week program designed to train and evaluate candidates' leadership abilities, physical fitness, and knowledge of Coast Guard operations. Upon graduation from OCS, candidates are commissioned as officers in the Coast Guard Reserve.
If your that week that you could not make it into the Coast Guard 1)Go find a mirror 2)Stair at yourself long and hard 3)Now smack the sh!t out of yourself 4)Repeat till you cannot stand any more
It varies, there are no set hours for an interior decorator
There are 168 hours in a week
Hours in a week calculation One week has 7 days and one day has 24 hours: 1 week = 7 days/week = (7 days/week) × (24 hours/day) = 168 hours/week ==>168/2= 84 (hours)
148 hours
There are 168 hours are in a week.
There are 168 hours in 7 days (one week).
There are 196 hours in one week
168 hours in a week
Fleet Week is a United States Navy, United States Marine Corps and United States Coast Guard tradition in which active military ships recently deployed in overseas operations dock in a variety of major cities for one week. Once the ships dock, the crews can enter the city and visit its tourist attractions. At certain hours, the public can take a guided tour of the ships. Often, Fleet Week is accompanied by military demonstrations and air shows such as provided by the Blue Angels.