Members of the Alpine Hotshots walk to their assignment as the Cold Brook prescribed fire began. (Click on the photos to see larger versions.)
Today the National Park Service began igniting the 2,199-acre Cold Brook prescribed fire in Wind Cave National Park in the Black Hills of South Dakota. The project is in a wildland urban interface area with several private residences within a quarter mile of the site. The expectation was that Unit #1 would be burned today, October 23, and additional burning in Units #2 and/or #3 would occur on Friday. (See the map below.)
The goals are to reduce fuel loading in the ponderosa pine forest, decrease encroachment of young ponderosa pine into the prairie, and to decrease the wildfire threat for the nearby residences.
The project is adjacent to US Highway 385, which could be occasionally closed.
Dan Swanson and Mike Prowatzke (L to R) use a chart to convert the wet and dry bulb temperatures to a relative humidity reading on the Cold Brook prescribed fire. It turned out to be 27 percent as this photo was taken at 11 a.m. on October 12, 2014.Eric Allen, the Fire Management Officer for the NPS’ Northern Great Plains Area, conducts the briefing (as the Burn Boss) for the Cold Brook prescribed fire in Wind Cave National Park. NPS photo.Hunter “Snooki” Smith of the Alpine Hot Shots pauses while lighting the Cold Brook prescribed fire.I inevitably took several photos of Hunter “Snooki” Smith (above) of the Alpine Hotshots because I was on a road and he was lighting adjacent to the road. One of his fellow crew members gave him a hard time about being in so many pictures, and as this photo was taken he was explaining that, Hey, I’m just here and he is taking my picture. I then told the other crew members (jokingly) that Mr. Smith gave me a dollar to take his picture, which produced some laughter among the crew.This is a thermal infrared image of three members of the Alpine Hotshots standing in front of some burning grass on the edge of the prescribed fire. I will write more about the thermal imagery in another article.
Conditions can occasionally become very smoky on a prescribed fire.Before this photo was taken, the wind was very steady, blowing at about 5-7 mph parallel with the fire edge, from right to left. Suddenly the direction changed 90 degrees, and began blowing at about 10-12 mph away from the fire line, toward the lighter in the grassy field, as you can see above. There were shouts of “WIND SHIFT”, and a couple of firefighters moved to the right, but after about 15 seconds, the wind shifted again, blowing right to left as before.Using water from an ATV to help prevent the fire from crossing a mowed fireline.
Map of the Cold Brook prescribed fire. Only the northernmost unit, #1, was burned on Thursday, October 23. The other units may be burned on Friday, October 24. NPS map.
Except as noted, all photos were taken by Bill Gabbert for Wildfire Today and are protected by Copyright.
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After working full time in wildland fire for 33 years, he continues to learn, and strives to be a Student of Fire.
View all posts by Bill Gabbert
2 thoughts on “South Dakota: Cold Brook prescribed fire”
now THOSE are recruitment photos!
Maybe you could sell a couple to the R5 recruitment kids? With royalties paid to Snooki, of course.
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Thanks Kelly. I was thinking the same thing, that photos like these might provoke some interest from a young person looking for a job in the great outdoors… more so than the conga line photo the USFS is using for recruitment.
By the way, I added a couple of images after you left your comment.
now THOSE are recruitment photos!
Maybe you could sell a couple to the R5 recruitment kids? With royalties paid to Snooki, of course.
Thanks Kelly. I was thinking the same thing, that photos like these might provoke some interest from a young person looking for a job in the great outdoors… more so than the conga line photo the USFS is using for recruitment.
By the way, I added a couple of images after you left your comment.