Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Surprise Trip to Alaska!



We have a guest blogger this week, Ryan, from Red Wolf Recovery Program! He's recently returned from a fire assignment and is sharing the details and photos this week from his trip.  Thanks, Ryan!
Firefighters in Idaho. Photo by Anthony Conte, U.S. Forest Service.
Wildland firefighting is something I have participated in for a number of years now.  Since Red Wolf Recovery Program-related field work tends to slow down during the dog days of summer, it provides me an opportunity to do shift gears for a while and lend a hand during the peak wildfire season.  Once a firefighter declares himself available for a (typically 14 day) detail, he or she can be called up at any time and sent to wherever resources may be needed at the time.

On August 10, I received such a call.  Another Alligator River biologist and myself were to fly to Boise, ID, and then drive to Oregon where we were to staff an engine.  We quickly packed our gear and booked our flights to Boise out of Norfolk, VA.  We were not yet halfway to Norfolk when we got a call from dispatch – the engine we were to staff had been accidentally double booked.  Our resource order was cancelled and we were to return home.  Disappointed, we stopped for a bite to eat before turning around.  It wasn’t 15 minutes later, however, when we received another call from dispatch.  Our plans had changed again.  We were to drive to Asheville, NC, where we would join the rest of a 20 person hand crew bound for Alaska!
We were both ecstatic!  Getting a fire detail in Alaska is extremely rare, especially in August, when cooler, wetter weather typically moves in and squelches the remaining fires, sending resources home.  This year, a high pressure system had settled in over Alaska’s interior, which kept several fires burning much later than normal, and they were forced to order up additional resources to assist with suppression.

NC Inter-agency crew. Photo by Anthony Conte/U.S. Forest Service
After joining the rest of our inter-agency crew (we had firefighters from the US Forest Service, National Park Service, and US Fish and Wildlife Service) we joined 4 additional 20-person crews and flew to Fairbanks, Alaska.  From there, the 5 crews were sent to various wildfires in the surrounding area as needed.  Our crew was sent to the Birch Creek fire, a 25,000 acre fire burning in tussock tundra and black spruce less than 50 miles from the Yukon River and the Arctic Circle.  Our assignment was to cut a containment line to keep the fire away from surrounding communities, and, if conditions permitted, do a burnout on the fire side of the containment line.  We completed the containment line in just a few days, and then the cooler, wetter, weather pattern more typical to that part of Alaska in August, gradually moved in.  Our burnout was no longer needed, and we were sent back to the western lower 48, where fire danger was still extremely high and many wildfires were still burning.
Denali (Mt. McKinley). Photo by Ryan Nordsven/USFWS
Coastal mountains and glaciers in Alaska. Photo by Ryan Nordsven/USFWS.
Birch Creek fire camp - interior Alaska. Photo by Ryan Nordsven/USFWS.
We extended our detail to 21 days (instead of the normal 14) and continued to assist with two fires in north-central Idaho along the Clearwater River, and two more near the Idaho/Montana border just north of the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness.  As I mentioned earlier, when you make yourself available for a fire detail, you never really know where you will end up or who you will be working with.  After spending almost 4 weeks (including travel) with a great bunch of people and seeing some of the wildest, most scenic country in the US, I feel like I couldn’t have hand picked a better fire detail!
Clearwater River - Idaho. Photo by Anthony Conte/U.S. Forest Service.
A big thank you to all these firefighters from the Red Wolf Recovery Program!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Return of the Blog

It’s been nearly nine months since our last post. Have you missed us? Maybe you've wondered why we've been quiet on our blog. Well, it hasn't been for a lack of stuff to blog about. So much has happened in the Red Wolf Recovery Program in the last nine months -- we have experienced fires, hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, and even plague... but thankfully not the bubonic kind.

[Photo credit: Donnie Harris/USFWS]

It all started in early May of last year with a lightning strike in the Pain’s Bay region of the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge. The Pain’s Bay Fire, as it was called, spread over more than 45,000 acres, and had all of us revising our contingency plans with each new acre burned. Some of our biologists even donned their firefighting PPE (personal protective equipment) to fight the blaze.

[Photo credit: NASA NOAA GOES Project]

The fire burned for nearly four months. In fact, the fire wasn’t fully extinguished until Hurricane Irene made landfall on the Outer Banks of North Carolina on the morning of August 27. Hurricane Irene had weakened to a Category 1 hurricane, with winds of 85 mph (140 km/h), just before it made landfall, so the damage from wind was minimal. But the hurricane tracked over eastern North Carolina and the Red Wolf Recovery Area for about ten hours before re-emerging into the Atlantic near the southern end of the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia. And ten hours of rain left substantial portions of the area severely flooded.

[Photo credit: John Bazemore/AP]

Of course, all the rain from Hurricane Irene and the subsequent flooding made for perfect breeding grounds for mosquitoes. And when the mosquitoes hatched, they hatched in force! A plague of mosquitoes had local officials mounting multiple aerial assaults on the blood-sucking pests.

[Shown "nearly" actual size -- Photo credit: Tim McGill/CLTV]

But that’s not all. Less than a week before Hurricane Irene hit, on August 23rd to be exact, a 5.8 magnitude earthquake shook the Red Wolf Recovery Area. Although the epicenter of the quake was near Richmond, Virginia, the effects were felt throughout the eastern U.S. And several aftershocks, ranging up to 4.5 in magnitude, occurred after the main tremor. The 5.8 earthquake was the largest to have occurred in the U.S. east of the Rocky Mountains since the earthquake of 1897 in western Virginia.

[Photo credit: USGS]

And as if a fire, a hurricane, a flood, an earthquake, and swarming mosquitoes weren’t enough, the Red Wolf Recovery Program lost several breeding wolves and managed coyotes to gunshot during the fall hunting season (we’ll have more on that in the near future, so stay tuned). But we’ve hit the ground running in 2012. And now whelping season -- when red wolf pups are born -- is just around the corner. So, be on the lookout for more blogs. I promise it won’t be nine months before you can enjoy our next rambling.