WildlandFireLLC
WildlandFireLLC
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Episode 36 - 30 Years of Growth: The Wildland Fire Service After 1994
Kelly Woods visits with Larry Sutton, Jim Cook, and Chris Wilcox to capture their reflections on the 30 years that have passed since the watershed 1994 fire season when the wildland fire community lost 34 firefighters in the line of duty. That season changed the trajectory of the wildland fire program and was a catalyst in the development of many things we take for granted today. Larry, Jim, and Chris provide their perspective on what was happening culturally at that time and as these significant changes began. They also share lessons on how to be an agent of change.
Просмотров: 132

Видео

Episode 35 - Mental Health: First Steps to Getting Help
Просмотров 3228 дней назад
Kelly Woods and Travis Dotson visit with Riva Duncan and Dr. Patty O’Brien about some considerations when deciding to seek therapy, how to find a therapist, and how to get the most out of the experience when working with a therapist. The conversation covers many topics about mental health, including personal experiences related to therapy and the importance of having a support network.
The Butte Fire Staff Ride
Просмотров 8 тыс.2 месяца назад
Over 30 years after the entrapment and shelter deployments on the Butte Fire, a group of those who were there went back to that fireground with a group of students to walk through the events and their lessons learned on that day. After the site visit, the entire group discussed the experience, including their takeaways to carry forward. The Butte Fire entrapment occurred on the Salmon-Challis N...
Episode 34 - Lessons From 2023
Просмотров 2828 дней назад
Travis Dotson and Kelly Woods talk about lessons the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center received in learning reviews and reports in 2023. Travis highlights some themes and shares his unique insights on data. Throughout the conversation, Travis and Kelly reference the Annual Incident Review Summary and the latest issue of Two More Chains which feature many of the lessons discussed and provide ...
Episode 33 - Firefighter Cancer and Wellbeing
Просмотров 1028 дней назад
Erik Apland talks with Erin Phelps and Kat DuBose about wildland fire presumptive illness legislation, some lessons associated with filing a cancer-related claim with the Department of Labor’s Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, and firefighter exposure to environmental hazards. Erin and Kat define what presumptive illness means for wildland firefighters and share their insights on when s...
Counter Rotating Vortex Pairs El Dorado Fire 2020
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.4 месяца назад
Describes a fire behavior phenomenon called the Counter Rotating Vortex Pair. This video was created to learn from the death of Charlie Morton, a Big Bear Hotshot squad boss, on September 17, 2020 on the El Dorado Fire.
Episode 32 - Chance, Pain, Healing, and Hope
Просмотров 928 дней назад
Kelly Woods visits with Tyler Doggett in a candid conversation about some of the mental health difficulties that often accompany a career in wildland fire. Tyler openly shares his story which includes a chance search and rescue, a shattered femur, battles with alcohol, and the loss of loved ones. It also includes the power of gaining perspective, seeking help, healing, and hope. If you or someo...
Episode 31 - Two More Chains - Fire Workers
Просмотров 1428 дней назад
Travis Dotson and Erik Apland discuss the most recent issue of the quarterly publication Two More Chains centered on the wildland fire worker. Travis and Erik talk about the history and explore a few of the hot buttons we face today as fire seasons and the workforce change. Download the issue at: lessons.wildfire.gov/two-more-chains
Episode 30 - Data Points - Your UTV is on Fire
Просмотров 1028 дней назад
Kelly Woods and Travis Dotson discuss the latest edition of Data Points that focuses on UTV fires. Data Points is the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center publication designed to highlight a collection of similar events that signal a need for specific action. The action recommended here: Equip all UTVs with an accessible and serviceable fire extinguisher. Data Points can be found on our website...
Episode 29 - Two More Chains - Lessons from Firing Operations
Просмотров 1328 дней назад
Kelly Woods and Travis Dotson discuss incidents featured in the latest issue of Two More Chains, the quarterly publication produced at the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center. Each of the featured incidents involves firing operations. Their lessons are diverse and meaningful. More information on each of these incidents can be found on our website, www.lessons.wildfire.gov. Click on the Inciden...
Rapid Lesson Sharing Lost Horse Creek Fire 2023
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.10 месяцев назад
Leaders from an incident management team and the BLM discuss lesson sharing related to a burn injury which occurred on the Lost Horse Creek Fire in Alaska in August of 2023.
Episode 28 - Lessons from 2022
Просмотров 728 дней назад
Kelly Woods and Travis Dotson discuss lessons collected at the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center in 2022. The centerpiece of the conversation is recent analysis of incident reports and learning reviews submitted by the field. Listen in to discover new information, action you can take, and nuances to facilitate learning.
Episode 27 - Learning and Leaving a Legacy
Просмотров 1028 дней назад
Kelly Woods talks with Sarah Fisher and Chad Fisher about what learning in the wildland fire service means to them. Sarah and Chad describe their different experiences landing them both near the top of their respective organizations. They each discuss their path and the lessons they learned along the way. Throughout the conversation, Sarah and Chad highlight their perspectives on learning and l...
Rapid Lesson Shared: Short Haul Site Selection
Просмотров 5 тыс.Год назад
On August 10, 2022, while assigned to the Big Swamp Fire, Collin Hagan was fatally injured when he was struck by a falling tree. The purpose of this learning product is to provide the field a general reference for what a short haul site could be. Always remember that final site approval is ultimately up to the helicopter pilot and crew. An in-depth narrative from the perspective of the particip...
MiddleForkAudioUpdateEnglish
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.Год назад
This video is part of the Middle Fork Complex Tree Strike Fatality Facilitated Learning Analysis. This incident occurred on August 23,02021 in Oregon. For more information visit: www.wildfirelessons.net/viewdocument/middle-fork-complex-hit-by-tree-fat
MiddleForkFLA Spanish
Просмотров 287Год назад
MiddleForkFLA Spanish
Episode 26 - When Options Run Out: The Human Side of an Entrapment
Просмотров 3428 дней назад
Episode 26 - When Options Run Out: The Human Side of an Entrapment
Episode 25 - Fireline Lessons - Tangible Take-Aways from Recent Incidents
Просмотров 2028 дней назад
Episode 25 - Fireline Lessons - Tangible Take-Aways from Recent Incidents
Family Business - Two Generations Talk Fire and What's Important Through the Years.
Просмотров 5322 года назад
Family Business - Two Generations Talk Fire and What's Important Through the Years.
Episode 24 - Family Business - Two Generations Talk Fire and What’s Important Through the Years
Просмотров 428 дней назад
Episode 24 - Family Business - Two Generations Talk Fire and What’s Important Through the Years
Rocky Mountain National Park Lessons Learned Partnerships
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.2 года назад
Rocky Mountain National Park Lessons Learned Partnerships
Rocky Mountain National Park 2020 Fires Lessons Learned
Просмотров 2 тыс.2 года назад
Rocky Mountain National Park 2020 Fires Lessons Learned
Episode 23 - Reading, Reflecting, and Changing Behavior
Просмотров 528 дней назад
Episode 23 - Reading, Reflecting, and Changing Behavior
Episode 22 - An Entrapment Survival Story: Before, During and After
Просмотров 2428 дней назад
Episode 22 - An Entrapment Survival Story: Before, During and After
Tree Felling Accidents - What the Numbers Say
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.3 года назад
Tree Felling Accidents - What the Numbers Say
Episode 21 - Tree Felling Accidents...What The Numbers Say
Просмотров 228 дней назад
Episode 21 - Tree Felling Accidents...What The Numbers Say
Episode 20 - Command Presence
Просмотров 1428 дней назад
Episode 20 - Command Presence
Facilitated Learning Analysis: An Introduction
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.4 года назад
Facilitated Learning Analysis: An Introduction
Episode 19 - Transitions
Просмотров 628 дней назад
Episode 19 - Transitions
Wildland Firefighter Health Effects Study- A Brief Overview
Просмотров 8 тыс.4 года назад
Wildland Firefighter Health Effects Study- A Brief Overview

Комментарии

  • @matthewmetzer83
    @matthewmetzer83 8 дней назад

    The creek fire.... Almost 400,000 acres... 380,000... Ha 100 acres!

  • @matthewmetzer83
    @matthewmetzer83 8 дней назад

    100 acres? 😅

  • @owenroper-iw1jt
    @owenroper-iw1jt 10 дней назад

    Thanks for the briefing. I am always thinking what if. Where is safety? What is the risk? How intense can it burn? How much do I know of the situation? Always maintain board situational awareness, if you loose it go back to safety and rebuild your situational awareness. Never watch a video like this and think it can't happen to you. Some of the most experienced people in the world of fire have died when they have lost that situational awareness.

  • @pfrstreetgang7511
    @pfrstreetgang7511 14 дней назад

    California does one thing really well 100% of the time.....trains completely reliable fire fighters who always communicate everything you have to know in 5 seconds or less.

  • @pizzafrenzyman
    @pizzafrenzyman 23 дня назад

    9:47 My thoughts exactly. Whoever suggested turning around made a critical error.

  • @davidhardy2960
    @davidhardy2960 29 дней назад

    I was on this fire

  • @Shutupbootlicker
    @Shutupbootlicker Месяц назад

    Rotating plume! Very dangerous

  • @timgreer1487
    @timgreer1487 Месяц назад

    They should have never been there in the first. This was a sad, sad story. A lack of situation awareness by the IMT put these folks in harms way to do a task that was later going to be done by heavy equipment anyway. I have walked walk more canyon and seen the crosses. It will break your heart. It was an transition day for the IMT and nobody was paying attention to the fire behaviour. There were indicators that this was going to happen and the only person who picked up on it was Paul Gleason who pulled his crew out. He was unaware there was anyone else in there.

  • @bethhale2040
    @bethhale2040 Месяц назад

    How many women or are there any women on these crews who are not the pilot?

    • @josieheath4798
      @josieheath4798 Месяц назад

      Quite a few, actually! In my experience, there tend to be a lot of women in (fire-related) aviation in general. At least in the Park Service. On one of my crews men were the super minority, on another crew it was a pretty even split among seasonal employees.

  • @andybee4236
    @andybee4236 Месяц назад

    People need to see this. Most don't understand the violence, intense heat of a wind blown bushfire/wildfire. People cant comprehend that this much heat creates its own weather. Stay safe all firefighters. 🔥❤❤❤

  • @ascensionrocksUT
    @ascensionrocksUT 2 месяца назад

    Air attack sounds like a douche

  • @leesenger3094
    @leesenger3094 2 месяца назад

    I thought there was a can in the garage on that wire shelf🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @kevinjohns9642
    @kevinjohns9642 2 месяца назад

    Does anyone know the owner of this channel?

    • @WildfirelessonsNet
      @WildfirelessonsNet 2 месяца назад

      Hi, there. The Wildland Fire Lessons Leaned Center (lessons.wildfire.gov/) owns this RUclips channel.

  • @kevinjohns9642
    @kevinjohns9642 2 месяца назад

    Does anyone know the owner of this channel? Facebook and site links not working.

    • @WildfirelessonsNet
      @WildfirelessonsNet 2 месяца назад

      Hi....the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center (lessons.wildfire.gov/) is the owner of this RUclips channel.

  • @JH-kn6rt
    @JH-kn6rt 2 месяца назад

    I couldn't tell from the video, but the right side of the column looked like one half of a counter-rotating vortex. Which means extreme fire behavior. Already obvious by the flame length.

  • @nbutter2779
    @nbutter2779 4 месяца назад

    Did the green type 3 get out? Looked like it hadn't moved yet??

  • @joshjones3408
    @joshjones3408 4 месяца назад

    The lady looks like linda Hamilton termanater 2 thats cool.... great video 👍👍👍

  • @bethanyring658
    @bethanyring658 4 месяца назад

    Bullshi

  • @jamierobinson2466
    @jamierobinson2466 6 месяцев назад

    Thoses dangerous STIHL caps should be banned ,I’ve had petrol & oil down my leg many times

  • @jamierobinson2466
    @jamierobinson2466 6 месяцев назад

    They just bad design

  • @jamierobinson2466
    @jamierobinson2466 6 месяцев назад

    I hate those caps too

  • @BushyHairedStranger
    @BushyHairedStranger 7 месяцев назад

    21:39,..Oboe playing indicates something ominous, something BAD is about to happen….

  • @countryboy7mag56
    @countryboy7mag56 7 месяцев назад

    Scary situation to be in but glad they have made it through. Props to the dozer operator for operating till he couldn't no more.

  • @dougreid2351
    @dougreid2351 7 месяцев назад

    As a Navy Corpman among a group of Corpsmen our praactice was, when we failed to start an IV or draw blood with two tries we would turn the task over to another Corpsman. Two strikes & out. DOUG out

  • @fredschoeffler1425
    @fredschoeffler1425 7 месяцев назад

    This is merely a USFS sponsored feel-good video. The Perryville Crew fatalities were due to their Crew Boss leaving the Crew without proper supervision during a critical period. And we could have easily saved Zane Grey Cabin if allowed to continue our firing operation. Zane Grey Cabin burned from the top down due to embers based on the unburned trees left behind. The IMT lied about us foaming it down! We moved to the Tonto Creek Fish Hatchery and successfully fired that out with minimal structure loss.

  • @p.ipebomb
    @p.ipebomb 8 месяцев назад

    I remember watching this as a stupid kid in the notorious 'California Conservation Corps' 🐻 and when they showed the white, glowing hand tools, I was like hooooly crap this shit is electricccc!! 🔥🌲🪓

  • @michaelpcooksey5096
    @michaelpcooksey5096 9 месяцев назад

    Maybe not for this event, but from my little student's chair it looks like Firefighters need their own hand signals to communicate when all they can do is see their target. Radio out, Locomotive fire sound, across the gorge/draw/ etc. [Not fine hand configurations ... but arm and hand signals. Military Special ops have theirs for close in contact ... Look at the Indian Sign Language and the sign language for the deaf as a start point ... but get set signals to communicate standard messages in deployment situations.

  • @michaelpcooksey5096
    @michaelpcooksey5096 9 месяцев назад

    I hope the fire shelters now have versions that keep their structural integrity in water and wave action. I wonder if some sort of chain mail material made of { ?] might keep things together

  • @Scandibilly
    @Scandibilly 9 месяцев назад

    It seems like 9 out of 10 times a line of vehicles gets stuck like this because vehicles in the front of the convoy take their gd time. You'd think "moving with a sense of urgency" when the fire is coming wouldn't necessarily need to be taught, but apparently it does.

  • @ChrisTopheRaz
    @ChrisTopheRaz 9 месяцев назад

    That’s crazy. I was literally in Kohl’s Ranch when that happened. We were woken up and had to evacuate into Payson. Raining ash was exactly what I saw too. 9:03

  • @ChrisTopheRaz
    @ChrisTopheRaz 9 месяцев назад

    It was only one strike that started the fire. I literally watched it happen from diamond hill. We were with the wildlife department working on a fire line for a planned future controlled burn.

  • @victor-th4qs
    @victor-th4qs 10 месяцев назад

    That sound of fire. Making a run. Like a frieght train.

  • @DrunkenGuitarGuy
    @DrunkenGuitarGuy 10 месяцев назад

    website dead it seems, too bad!

    • @WildfirelessonsNet
      @WildfirelessonsNet 10 месяцев назад

      We updated it: lessons.wildfire.gov/incident/twisp-river-fire-entrapments-and-fatalities-2015

  • @warplotus
    @warplotus 10 месяцев назад

    as a burn survivor of a house fire when I was a baby, I have always respected all firefighters of all types. from the pilots and dozer operators all the way to the smokejumpers and line peeps. thank you all.

  • @warplotus
    @warplotus 10 месяцев назад

    why does this all sound like a Hollywood movie? people don't really write or talk like this, do they?

    • @andrews9328
      @andrews9328 6 месяцев назад

      Clear, observant minds are required to assess and react constructively to hectic situations. Being able to clearly describe the situation as it unfolded is a sign of such a clear mind and enables teaching. Yes, people do think, write and talk like that.

  • @MrFinallythere
    @MrFinallythere 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing story. Your training certainly saved your lives. You said: " I never knew anyone who survived in a shelter." Well Sir, you do now ;)

  • @horsebattery9243
    @horsebattery9243 10 месяцев назад

    One of the lessons must be to block new build property development in wildland areas. The houses they died protecting are recently built. Did the property developers think about the fire risk? Have they made a donation to the families of the fallen and injured?

  • @gumps1986
    @gumps1986 10 месяцев назад

    Like being a burger on the grill. What a terrifying situation.

  • @CoveyLogging-xg4vv
    @CoveyLogging-xg4vv 10 месяцев назад

    Allison, is hands down one of the best Fire people I have ever had the opportunity to work with.

  • @sandraash2596
    @sandraash2596 10 месяцев назад

    It looks like they waited too long to deploy their shelters. Panic? On another video I noticed they were having problems with the yellow strap while trying to deploy. It seems we need more research for shelters so they can be deployed quicker and they don't delaminate. One of the things that helped a crew member on the other fire was that he dug a hole for his face and rested his chin on his pile of dirt.

    • @reverberer
      @reverberer 10 месяцев назад

      according to the case study video on this channel everyone that deployed and stayed under survived. some couldnt deploy, one person left the shelter. ruclips.net/video/VP5k8nd3cdo/видео.html

  • @alanhelton
    @alanhelton 11 месяцев назад

    That was unacceptable from a safety standpoint. How you let firefighters be on the fire line with even the remote possibility of such dynamic weather… The instability that had to been present should’ve been a clear warning not to have firefighters on line. Did we learn a thing from Yarnell Hill or any of the other countless times we’ve lost multiple firefighters because of weather related disaster on the fireline. Be it burn over, falling snags from strait line winds, or nearly in this case a tornado… Glad to see everyone made it out okay but that was only by blind luck.

  • @alanhelton
    @alanhelton 11 месяцев назад

    So the guy worked himself so hard his muscles failed, dumping CPK in mass… that’s saying something in and of itself

  • @alanhelton
    @alanhelton 11 месяцев назад

    Tommy’s shelter wasn’t going to take much more… Glad you are all here with us.

  • @joshjones3408
    @joshjones3408 11 месяцев назад

    The man that's talking when it starts looks mad ..😊

  • @washedupwarvet2027
    @washedupwarvet2027 11 месяцев назад

    It’s nice people helping out but the guy stays behind with his wife to fight a fire with a couple 5 gallon buckets is really stupid. If you live in that area then invest in some actual equipment. If not then evacuate and don’t become a liability for firefighters having to come save your ass. Putting others peoples lives at risk for things that can be rebuilt.

  • @Dovietail
    @Dovietail Год назад

    What an amazing and brave young woman.

  • @Dovietail
    @Dovietail Год назад

    Um, NO. Just DO NOT GET OUT OF YOUR TRUCK if there are ANY communication snafus or inadequacies. Those are what get firefighters killed.

  • @josephbrandt6778
    @josephbrandt6778 Год назад

    In these remote area fires who cares just let em burn out if no life or structure etc are in danger...makes no sense to me!

  • @Aw-ns1qx
    @Aw-ns1qx Год назад

    We NEED to supply our fire fighters with more funding. They deserve it.