Close Menu
Healthtost
  • News
  • Mental Health
  • Men’s Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Skin Care
  • Sexual Health
  • Pregnancy
  • Nutrition
  • Fitness
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Injectable immunotherapy shrinks precancerous oral lesions in clinical trials

April 21, 2026

Study finds many UK adults want to avoid ultra-processed foods but can’t clearly define them

April 21, 2026

Mineral vs. Chemical Sunscreens Explained

April 21, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Healthtost
SUBSCRIBE
  • News

    Injectable immunotherapy shrinks precancerous oral lesions in clinical trials

    April 21, 2026

    Final Patient Completes Phase Ib Clinical Study of AlzeCure with NeuroRestore ACD856

    April 21, 2026

    Certain prenatal medications are linked to an increased risk of autism

    April 20, 2026

    Study reveals significant gaps in MMR vaccine knowledge among ER patients

    April 20, 2026

    Short-term and cumulative exposure to air pollution is associated with increased migraine activity

    April 19, 2026
  • Mental Health

    I hate hope: How to manage hope when you have treatment-resistant bipolar disorder

    April 19, 2026

    Rose Byrne is raw, magnetic and unfiltered as a woman in crisis

    April 18, 2026

    Can a single mother change her child’s surname in India?

    April 16, 2026

    Is it anxiety or OCD? 2 psychology experts explain the difference

    April 14, 2026

    Understanding the different types of treatment: C…

    April 10, 2026
  • Men’s Health

    Study finds many UK adults want to avoid ultra-processed foods but can’t clearly define them

    April 21, 2026

    How can you get the best sleep?

    April 21, 2026

    The Crazy Hard Standards of the Hardest PE Program in History

    April 20, 2026

    Becoming revolutionaries in our time: Calling men to change the world for good

    April 20, 2026

    35-minute bodyweight chest workout routine at home

    April 16, 2026
  • Women’s Health

    Mineral vs. Chemical Sunscreens Explained

    April 21, 2026

    Scientists identify simple rituals like drinking tea to help reconnect focus in a distracted world

    April 20, 2026

    Rooted in Justice and Joy: BWHI Appears for Black Maternal Health Week 2026

    April 20, 2026

    Can a girl be so tight it hurts? The Truth About Pelvic Strain – Vuvatech

    April 18, 2026

    At 76, she went from knee pain every night to climbing 7 flights without pain

    April 17, 2026
  • Skin Care

    What it is and how to do it right – Lifeline Skin Care

    April 21, 2026

    Best Face Mask Set: What to Use for Your Skin Goals

    April 21, 2026

    Earth Day Activities: A Fun Guide to Plogging and More

    April 20, 2026

    Calm & Correct: The 4-in-1 color correcting treatment

    April 19, 2026

    How to Get Glowing Skin: Beauty Guide

    April 17, 2026
  • Sexual Health

    Understanding the Asexual Spectrum — Sexual Health Alliance

    April 21, 2026

    The importance of sex and intimacy in the elderly

    April 18, 2026

    Judicial reform is the only real way out of today’s political hell

    April 15, 2026

    Personal and Professional considerations between generations

    April 15, 2026

    Can you get tested for herpes without an outbreak?

    April 14, 2026
  • Pregnancy

    A gentle space to navigate the becoming of motherhood

    April 21, 2026

    Transfer to birth center C-section, birth center VBAC and Surprise Footling Breech Transfer to home

    April 18, 2026

    What is an Onbuhimo? Everything you need to know about this underrated carrier

    April 18, 2026

    Is Saffron Milk safe in the 9th month of pregnancy?

    April 16, 2026

    Serious maternal complications affect nearly 3 per cent of pregnancies, Ontario study finds

    April 11, 2026
  • Nutrition

    What foods to avoid if you have fatty liver disease

    April 18, 2026

    Peanut Chicken Bowl + $75 Peanut Lover’s Giveaway

    April 18, 2026

    7 selective tips that really work

    April 17, 2026

    Baked Egg Muffin Cups with Vegetable Crust

    April 17, 2026

    Sweet rhubarb butter & strawberry rhubarb

    April 15, 2026
  • Fitness

    Why Professional Athletes Swear By Cold Therapy Tubs For Fast Recovery

    April 21, 2026

    Questions to Ask Before Choosing a Health Coaching Certification Program

    April 20, 2026

    Foods to support midlife health

    April 20, 2026

    Identity Inversion: Part 2 – Ben Greenfield Life

    April 19, 2026

    Lessons from an adaptive dance program

    April 19, 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
Healthtost
Home»Men's Health»The fitness test of America’s most elite Citizen Search and Rescue Team
Men's Health

The fitness test of America’s most elite Citizen Search and Rescue Team

healthtostBy healthtostMarch 10, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
The Fitness Test Of America's Most Elite Citizen Search And
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Search and rescue (SAR) teams in US national parks respond to lost hikers, injured climbers, stranded boaters, missing children, and emergency medical emergencies. Their work ranges from relatively simple trail searches to high-angle rope rescues, rapid water retrievals, helicopter evacuations and multi-day backcountry operations.

The National Park Service (NPS) has its own search and rescue capability. Many parks employ licensed law enforcement rangers and specialist rescue rangers who are trained in technical rescue, emergency medicine and incident management. Some large or high-risk parks maintain dedicated SAR teams consisting of full-time personnel.

At the same time, NPS often collaborates with volunteer and partner organizations. Depending on the park and the incident, they may coordinate with local sheriff’s offices, county SAR teams (often volunteer-based), mountain rescue teams, state agencies, the Coast Guard, or even military aviation units. In some parks, volunteers are formally integrated into SAR operations under the supervision of the NPS.

Among the parks partnering with outside organizations is the Great Smoky Mountains, America’s busiest national park. That’s where the Backcountry Unit Search and Rescue (BUSAR) team;headed by Andrew Herrington, operates.

When BUSAR members train, they do so through their own non-profit organization. When a rescue mission is launched and they respond, members are temporarily hired as National Park Service emergency workers. Some members don’t get paid and just volunteer their time and talent. No one gets rich from this. it’s not because these guys do it. They find the work incredibly challenging and rewarding.

If you break your leg while hiking in the Smokies, chances are Andrew and his crew are helping the PSAR Rangers carry you out. They’ll do it whether it’s raining, snowing, dark, steep, or completely off-piste. And carrying an injured person in a litter through rough terrain while wearing packs loaded with medical and survival gear is brutally hard work.

To achieve this, these guys need to be fit. Not fit for Instagram-influencer. Useful app.

To create a group of men who are physically fit, BUSAR has developed a fitness test that checks which members will be able to do the hard, frustrating work of rescuing people.

I recently spoke with Andrew about why he created the BUSAR and the fitness test he uses to assess whether potential team members will be ready for action — and for anything.

Meet Andrew and BUSAR

Andrew is a professional hunter and trapper who has worked for the National Park Service in the Smokies for over two decades. Raised outdoors, taught his first survival lesson as a child (still teaches them), and eventually landed in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Law Enforcement Division. There he got his first taste of search and rescue work. Whenever there was a rescue mission, rangers would call in personnel from various park departments. Andrew’s experience as a hog hunter in the park gave him deep knowledge of its vast, complex trail system.

Although, in fact, his first real experience with search and rescue was rescuing himself after a climbing accident as a teenager. This accident left him with a fractured skull, partial temporary paralysis and a metal plate in his head.

Twelve years ago, while working on search and rescue teams in the Smokies, Andrew noticed that not everyone who took on the job was prepared for it. He sat in on meetings where leaders admitted they couldn’t send some rangers to rescue because they weren’t fit enough.

So, about a decade ago, Andrew decided to create an elite, dedicated search and rescue team. He wanted the most qualified and physically fit people available and began recruiting guys who had extensive outdoor, military, surveillance, survival, firefighting, law enforcement and medical experience and possessed superior levels of physical fitness.

The BUSAR Fitness Test

To assess the readiness of potential members of this crackerjack search and rescue team, Andrew developed a rigorous fitness test they would have to pass to join. The test is designed to answer one question: Can this person do the job?

The Park Service requires rangers assigned to “difficult” duties to pass the USFS Work Aptitude Test, but it’s not particularly strenuous or revealing: rangers must walk three miles on level ground while carrying a 45-pound pack in less than 45 minutes. The test is easy to pass and doesn’t tell you much about how someone will perform off-road, under fatigue, while handling uncomfortable loads.

Andrew’s test is different. It’s stripped down, demanding and designed to replicate the effort required on a real life rescue mission.

Here is the BUSAR fitness test:

Thirty minute load transfer test

Applicants must first take the USFS package test described above. They then exchange their 45-pound pack for a 20-pound search and rescue pack. While wearing this pack and holding a 45-pound kettlebell, the candidate must also climb over a picnic table in a continuous circuit for 30 minutes.

Movement is awkward by design. Simulates lifting, lowering and repositioning of weight on uneven terrain. Grip fatigue sets in quickly.

Trap Bar Deadlift

A candidate must lift a trap bar loaded with two hundred and twenty-five pounds for as many repetitions as possible in one minute. The minimum you should go through is fifteen repetitions.

Back injuries are the most common injuries among rescue personnel. Carrying waste and repeatedly handling victims puts stress on the posterior chain. If your back can’t handle that kind of work under fatigue, you’re responsible.

Burpee pull-ups with a pack

This is the hardest part of the test.

Wearing the 20-pound SAR pack, candidates perform a burpee, jump to grab a pull-up bar, and pull themselves up. They have 10 minutes to complete at least 50 repetitions.

It is not a strict pull force. It’s about mobility, coordination and the ability to get up and down off the ground repeatedly. Crawling, climbing, scrambling and retrieving from awkward positions are constant features of real life rescues.

It is also a test of how candidates manage energy and fatigue. A lot of guys make the mistake of trying to go too fast and end up passing gas. Knowing how to regulate yourself is a skill you need when carrying someone out on a litter.

Andrew asked people to suggest he change the test to make it “more scientific”. But he believes that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. In the ten years he’s been giving the test, he hasn’t seen anyone who passed it fail a real mission.

Education Together

All BUSAR members are expected to maintain physical fitness so that they are ready when the call ends. Many of them do CrossFit and rucking.

For a while, Andrew’s team met weekly for team training. They would show up at a park with their suitcases and someone would bring kettlebells and sandbags. They would create a workout on the spot: sandbag throws, buddy carries, burpees, pull-ups, kettlebell swings. The workouts weren’t fancy or optimized. They were practical.

But more importantly, according to Andrew, they built cohesion. Shared physical suffering creates trust. When you’ve watched someone grind without complaint, you have a better sense of how they’ll behave when things go awry in the wilderness.

Life eventually got in the way and the weekly workouts died down for a while. Andrew is now looking to bring them back, especially for younger team members.

In addition to maintaining physical fitness, the team meets quarterly to keep their technical skills sharp: land navigation, tracking, first aid, shelter systems and moving waste on land.

During high visiting periods, the team sometimes goes up to the park for pre-deployment. They are trained, stay ready and can respond quickly when called upon. During busy periods, they may be called several times a week.

Be strong to be useful

Most of us aren’t going to be pulling injured hikers out of the Smokies. But I think the average guy can learn from how BUSAR approaches fitness.

These guys are, as the 19th century naturalist Georges Hébert put it, strong enough to be useful.

You never know when you’ll need to move furniture all afternoon, shovel snow for an hour, carry a child who fell asleep, help a friend move, or deal with some minor emergency that turns physical. Training for general strength, core conditioning, and handling awkward loads helps you be ready for those moments.

So yes, keep doing your hypertrophy work and chasing PRs on your deadlift. But be sure to incorporate some BUSAR-style training so you’re ready when called into action.

And if you’re interested in doing volunteer search and rescue work, here are a few reasons why you can get involved.

Americas Citizen Elite Fitness Rescue search team Test
bhanuprakash.cg
healthtost
  • Website

Related Posts

Study finds many UK adults want to avoid ultra-processed foods but can’t clearly define them

April 21, 2026

How can you get the best sleep?

April 21, 2026

The Crazy Hard Standards of the Hardest PE Program in History

April 20, 2026

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
News

Injectable immunotherapy shrinks precancerous oral lesions in clinical trials

By healthtostApril 21, 20260

Injecting nivolumab (Opdivo) directly into precancerous oral lesions led to a reduction in lesion size…

Study finds many UK adults want to avoid ultra-processed foods but can’t clearly define them

April 21, 2026

Mineral vs. Chemical Sunscreens Explained

April 21, 2026

What it is and how to do it right – Lifeline Skin Care

April 21, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
TAGS
Baby benefits body brain cancer care Day Diet disease exercise finds Fitness food Guide health healthy heart Improve Life Loss Men mental Natural Nutrition Patients People Pregnancy research reveals risk routine sex sexual Skin Skincare study Therapy Tips Top Training Treatment ways weight women Workout
About Us
About Us

Welcome to HealthTost, your trusted source for breaking health news, expert insights, and wellness inspiration. At HealthTost, we are committed to delivering accurate, timely, and empowering information to help you make informed decisions about your health and well-being.

Latest Articles

Injectable immunotherapy shrinks precancerous oral lesions in clinical trials

April 21, 2026

Study finds many UK adults want to avoid ultra-processed foods but can’t clearly define them

April 21, 2026

Mineral vs. Chemical Sunscreens Explained

April 21, 2026
New Comments
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 HealthTost. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.