Montana Grad Student Leads Women in Wildfire Training

To become a wildland firefighter, you must pass the pack test.

Often considered the most daunting requirement of wildland certification, the test requires fire trainees to walk 3 miles in less than 45 minutes while carrying a 45-pound pack, simulating the physical demands of working on a fire line.

Knowing her trainees were nervous, Mikaela Balkind and her co-instructors showed up to the pack test wearing matching disco ball earrings.

She applied glitter to the cheeks of anyone who needed some extra encouragement. She cheered them on as their sparkling faces charged through the trees and over the finish line.

The pack test took place on the final day of the Women in Wildfire Training held this fall at the University of Montanaโ€™s Lubrecht Experimental Forest.

Inspired by her own experience as a wildland firefighter, Balkind, a UM graduate student, created this training to empower young women to join the wildfire profession, where women make up less than 15% of the national workforce.

University of Montana

Share the Post:
FREE QUICK SUBSCRIBE

Sign up to subscribe to custom state
Daily Dispatch emails for free

Select list(s):