COLCHESTER, Vt. – Vermont Army National Guard Soldiers trekked into the Canadian wilderness for “Guerrier Nordique,” a combined, two-week extreme cold-weather exercise.
Maj. Matthew Heffner and his small team of Green Mountain Boys trained 80 miles north of Havre-Saint Pierre, a small village in Quebec Province. That’s about 600 miles northeast of Burlington, Vermont, and nearly 700 miles from Colchester.
In 2012, the Vermont National Guard began a small unit exchange with Canadian cold-weather specialists. Heffner said he has attended the exercise since 2015.
“We now partner with the 35 Canadian Brigade Group, a reserve formation specializing in extreme cold weather survival. This time we worked with the Brigade Group Arctic Response Company,” said Heffner, who is the action officer for the 86th Troop Command in the VTARNG.
The 2022 scenario simulated a severe winter storm disrupting local villages’ power and fresh water supplies. Heffner said Canadian and U.S. military personnel assisted civil authorities.
“We were there to assist in a mission similar to what we might do with the National Guard in the U.S.,” said Heffner. “During this exercise, we did a lot of cold-weather search and rescue training. There is a great benefit to training this far north with Canadian forces; their winters are a lot harsher.”
"The first time a Soldier attends Canadian arctic training, Heffner said, “they are not good at it. No one is initially. You need repetitions in order to gain proficiency and a level of comfort with basic skills.”
Due to the extreme conditions, Heffner said few people are interested in attending more than one exercise.
“You take people to these cold-weather training exercises and they won’t want to do it a second time because it is brutal. To execute a tactical piece under these conditions, you must be comfortable in the environment you’re in.”
Heffner explained the difficulties of military operations in an arctic climate.
“In -35-degree (Fahrenheit) temperatures, you are fighting to stay alive where everything is a struggle, getting water, heating food, trying to stay warm and not get frostbite.”
He said the extreme cold not only adversely affects humans, but weapon lubrication freezes, batteries drain faster and there can be problems with optics.
For six days, exercise participants lived in tents across three sites, with transportation by snowmobile. This was a key area the Vermont Guardsmen were able to provide field guidance.
Heffner said the Canadians used toboggan-type sleds pulled behind snowmobiles to carry cargo and the Vermont Guardsmen helped with securing supplies.
“Because of Mountain Warfare School, we’re pretty skilled at tying knots. When you’re bouncing over rough terrain, you must do a really good job of securing your supplies. If you’re just tying square knots, it does not typically end well when gear goes flying. We gave an impromptu knot class that really helped them.”
In return, Heffner said the Canadians showed his group their method for heating meals ready to eat in arctic conditions.
“During the exercise, we used Canadian MREs. They prepare them differently,” Heffner said. “We tend to use dehydrated cold weather rations requiring a lot of water to prepare.”
The Canadian soldiers use a pressure cooker in the field. They add just a little water, a few handfuls of snow, the MRE, and the pressure cooker is extremely efficient because it uses less water.
Heffner believes there is no better arctic training experience.
“A preponderance of the Canadians have much more experience in harsh winter environments than we do and it’s a great opportunity for us to work with them,” he said.