If you have a sailor on USS Gridley right now, this is the cruise your family will tell stories about for years. A practical 2026 guide for Navy families at Naval Station Everett — what Southern Seas 2026 looks like operationally, the Ombudsman touchpoints and Fleet & Family Support Center resources you should already have bookmarked, the deployment-readiness checklist that matters most for the second half of the cruise, and what “Nimitz’s final overseas deployment” actually means for the rest of 2026.
The Cruise, in Plain Family Language
USS Gridley (DDG-101) is the only Arleigh Burke-class destroyer publicly assigned to the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group on Southern Seas 2026. Per U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command, the strike group is conducting partner-nation engagement and circumnavigating South America en route to Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia. The Navy has publicly confirmed this is USS Nimitz’s final overseas deployment before her 2027 decommissioning.
What that means in family-readiness terms: a multi-month deployment with port visits in partner-nation harbors, passing exercises at sea with multiple partner navies, and an East Coast arrival rather than a West Coast return. Gridley returns to Naval Station Everett separately, on a schedule the Navy has not publicly disclosed. For planning purposes, do not assume a specific return date.
Where the Strike Group Has Been Confirmed So Far
- March 7, 2026: Nimitz departed Bremerton.
- April 7–8, 2026: Bilateral engagement with the Ecuadorian Navy.
- April 17–21, 2026: Port visit to Valparaiso, Chile. President Kast came aboard Nimitz; Gridley moored pier-side. PASSEX with Chilean Navy frigate Capitán Prat after departure.
The remainder of the itinerary has not been publicly disclosed. Family-side communications about future stops should come through the Command Ombudsman, not from speculation. We will not speculate here either.
The Family-Readiness Checklist for the Rest of the Cruise
If your family is mid-deployment, the touchpoints that matter most for the second half of the cruise are:
- Stay on the Command Ombudsman’s distribution list. The Ombudsman is the official conduit for unclassified command-to-family communications and the place that information about scheduled returns, port visits, and family-day events is released first. Confirm your contact email and phone number with the Ombudsman are current.
- Use Fleet & Family Support at Naval Station Everett. The FFSC at NAVSTA Everett (2000 West Marine View Drive) runs deployment-support programs, financial counseling, employment services, and clinical and non-clinical counseling — all at no cost to active-duty service members and dependents. Walk-in hours, classes, and counseling appointments are available; the FFSC front desk can connect families to the right service.
- Check that DEERS, ID cards, Tricare, and emergency-contact records are current. The single biggest avoidable problem during a long deployment is an expired family-member ID card or a stale DEERS record. A quick check on milConnect resolves most of it without a base trip.
- Use the Military and Family Life Counseling (MFLC) program. Non-medical, confidential counseling for service members and family members, with no record kept in the medical file. NAVSTA Everett has MFLC counselors assigned; the Ombudsman or FFSC can connect you.
- Build the homecoming plan early. Because the strike group’s return is to Norfolk and Gridley returns to Everett separately, plan for the possibility that the carrier-side homecoming images and the Everett-side homecoming for Gridley happen on different timelines. Stay flexible until the Ombudsman has a confirmed date.
What’s Different About This Cruise for Naval Station Everett Families
Two things are unusual about this deployment relative to a typical Gridley underway:
The first is the historical weight. Nimitz, commissioned in 1975, is the lead ship of the Nimitz class — the backbone of the U.S. carrier fleet for half a century. The Navy has publicly confirmed Southern Seas 2026 is the carrier’s final operational deployment. Among Naval Station Everett’s five Arleigh Burke destroyers, Gridley is the one carrying the ensign alongside Nimitz for that final cruise. That is the part of the deployment your sailor will be telling family stories about for the next twenty years.
The second is the geography. South American port visits and partner-nation engagement are different in tempo and texture from the Western Pacific deployments Naval Station Everett ships often run. Time-zone difference is smaller. Family communications can be more predictable. Port visit windows tend to be a few days at a time in major partner harbors. None of that changes the operational tempo for the sailor, but it does change the rhythm for the family at home.
Resources Worth Bookmarking
- NAVSTA Everett Fleet & Family Support Center — front desk and program directory; free deployment, financial, and counseling support for all active-duty service members and dependents.
- NAVSTA Everett Galaxy Single Sailor Center / MWR — for the dependent and family-day side of homecoming.
- Military OneSource (1-800-342-9647) — 24/7 information and referral, and short-term non-medical counseling.
- Tricare West Region — coverage details, referrals, and the eligibility portal.
- milConnect — DEERS update, ID card renewals, family member enrollments.
- Command Ombudsman — your most important contact for the duration of the deployment.
The Questions Other Families Are Asking
When does Gridley get back to Everett?
The Navy has not publicly disclosed Gridley’s return date. Family-confirmed information will come through the Command Ombudsman. Do not plan from rumors.
Should we travel to Norfolk for Nimitz’s homecoming?
Nimitz’s arrival is the end of the carrier’s overseas deployment, but it is not Gridley’s homecoming. Gridley returns to Naval Station Everett on a separate schedule. Many Naval Station Everett families will choose to wait for the Everett-side homecoming, but personal plans are personal — the Ombudsman can confirm the carrier’s published events.
Can the sailor call home from a port visit?
Communications during port visits depend on the operational schedule and on the in-port routine. Sailors typically have communication options ranging from cell-phone roaming to base-ashore Wi-Fi. Specifics are command-discretionary; do not plan calls without your sailor’s confirmation.
What’s the difference between a PASSEX and a port visit?
A passing exercise (PASSEX) is a brief at-sea operation with a partner navy — typically a ship maneuver and signals exchange — and does not involve a stop in port. A port visit is a multi-day stop in a partner harbor with shore-side activity for the crew and bilateral engagement events.
How is this different from past Gridley deployments?
The cadence and tempo are familiar to families who have been through prior Southern Seas or Pacific Fleet deployments. What is different is Nimitz’s final-cruise status — Gridley is the only destroyer publicly assigned to Nimitz on her last underway period. That is operationally significant in a way most cruises are not.
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