Thinking about Serving?
Get
the information you need to decide if a military
career is right for you. No obligation -- just
free information from the branches of service
that interest you.
Get $1004 a Month! Your service may have
earned you great education benefits. Get up to
$1004 per month to pay for your undergraduate,
graduate or technical degree.
Find out about military-friendly schools today.
|
|
|
|
Read other articles about
Joining the Military!
|
|
Share
Your Stories!
Want to share an article, photo, or story with us? Make your
submissions and suggestions to Military.com here
-- help us bring the best, most important stories to your
fellow servicemembers, veterans, and family members. |
|
 |
| U.S. Marine Pfc. Katrina
Marie Helleson fights forest fires as a civilian. The seasonal job
left her with four months out of the year without a job so she joined
the Marine Corps Reserve. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl.
Darhonda V. Hall |
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C., Feb. 1, 2005 ? Many people
join the Marine
Corps to add excitement to their lives. As a firefighter, Pfc. Katrina
Marie Helleson already had plenty of excitement.
"I did not quit the Forest Service, I joined the Marine Corps Reserves,"
Helleson explained. "I wanted a chance to gain better leadership during
my time off, so I joined the Marine Corps."
For Helleson, a native of Tonasket, Wash., her experiences outside the
Marine Corps involved a seasonal job of fighting small acre forest fires
while working on an initial attack crew.
In 2001, Helleson was on a 20-person self-supporting crew that went
to large incident fires with high complexity. The crew, known as a National
Hotshot Crew, fought fires that threatened homes and other resources
out of Great Falls, Mont.
"On the Hotshot crew, I worked eight months and went to 10 different
states on fire emergencies," she said. "Our crew would stay out on the
fire line up to 16 days at a time and up to 16 hours a day."
Helleson served her country by preventing the spreading of small fires
and preserving the natural conservation of land.
The job, unfortunately, was seasonal so for four months out of the year,
she was laid off.
Helleson received her seasonal job with the Forest Service by attending
an academy in Sacramento, Calif., that prepared her for a supervisory
role as an engine foreman.
Helleson is an assistant foreman on an Initial Attack fire
engine, which only has 250-400 gallons of water and is ready to support
a small fire with either manpower and hand tools, or suppress the fire
with water.
"To this day, my preferred tool to use is still the chainsaw," she laughed.
Helleson decided to go through Marine recruit
training while in her "offf-season" of firefighting.
She will have a military occupational specialty of landing support specialist,
which involves the movement, evacuation, and hospitalization of personnel.
"I was inspired to join the best military branch that the world has
to offer and gain awesome experiences that I can apply in my everyday
life and job," said Helleson.
"All the co-workers that I work with at home support me a hundred percent
and are my motivation so I can be a better peer and supervisor."
Helleson said she plans to return to her job and become a smokejumper
by the end of next year. Helleson said a smokejumper is the most elite
firefighting job when it comes to forest fires.
"The most exhilarating moments in my firefighting career have been the
times where five or six of us firefighters get flown into an initial
attack fire in the wilderness and camp on the line after working hard
all day long to put it out," Helleson described.
© 2005 Defend
America. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's
and do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.
Use
your GI Bill benefits to get ahead. Get free information from military-friendly
schools.

|

|

|

|

|

|
EDUCATION
CENTER

Further your career
with education! Use your GI Bill and Tuition
Assistance benefits. Find schools that want
you! |
 |
|

|
 |

|

|
USE
YOUR VA LOAN BENEFIT

Mortgage rates are
at 30-year lowsnow's the time to consider
using your VA home loan. Get pre-approved!
|
|
|

|

|
|

|

|
|

|

|