A group of Penticton high school students got to test their firefighter instincts Thursday morning, tackling their first (simulated) dumpster fires.
Seven students from Princess Margaret Secondary and Penticton Secondary schools have been spending their spring break largely in classrooms with the Penticton Fire Department. But on Thursday, they busted out the hoses for some simulated live fire training.
After three 10-hour days in the classroom at the fire department’s Station 202, it was a bit of excitement for the students to get out to some hands-on training.
“It feels good; it’s a lot of fun. Learning new stuff and learning how to put out fires,” said Princess Margaret student Max Lauder, who said he had already planned on being a firefighter in the future.
“When I was up there it was so smoky I couldn’t see at all, but we got the mask on so you can breath, so it’s good.”
Prior to that, McKenzie said the students got some training on using the hoses, but aside from that they were in the classrooms for the most part, learning things like safety.
“It’s good. We’re learning lots of new stuff everyday. We’re over in the mobile container over there, and we sit in the class, watch power points, learn how to tie knots and do a lot of stuff,” Lauder said.
The students are getting a total 100 hours of training in firefighting, with 60 hours in the classroom and the training grounds and the remainder split between three ride-alongs on weekends down the line.
“They’re not going to be fully qualified firefighters when they’re done, but we’re trying to give them a taste of it and they can see if they’d maybe like this job as a career path,” McKenzie said.
McKenzie said the students have shown plenty of enthusiasm, and are expected to head back to school to talk about their experience.
The fire department hopes it will gain traction, as officials hope to bring the program back for a second year next spring.