“The drill hall at Jericho, Vt.’s Ethan Allen Firing Range looks like a cluttered, dimly lit high-school gymnasium,” Tyler Cohen writes in the November 2015 issue. “And on a snowy January morning, it’s filled by more than 100 young-faced National Guardsmen, each preparing for a week of tactical and on-snow training.”
In “Green Mountain Snow Soldiers,” Cohen goes on tour with the Vermont Army National Guard, the nation’s only mountain infantry battalion, as they refocused their skills and training to over-snow pursuits, including ski touring, during a weeklong training last winter. The Vermont National Guard is the only Mountain Infantry Battalion, active or reserve, with formal requirements from the Department of Defense to conduct mountain operations. That means this group is specifically prepared to fight in mountain environments, with a mandate to maintain 70 percent of personnel as Military Mountaineers trained by the Army Mountain Warfare School.
“In the Army, there are no other units that do this anymore,” Captain Micah Kidney, Commander of Alpha Company, says in the story. “We’re it. We’re pretty proud of that. We’re pretty proud of that heritage.”
Here’s a gallery from Cohen’s story, shot by photographer Cyril Brunner. To read the entire story, grab a copy of the November 2015 issue, available now at backcountrymagazine.com/store.
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To read the entire story, grab a copy of the November 2015 issue, available now at backcountrymagazine.com/store.
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