Red Flag Warnings April 25, 2016

Red Flag Warnings 4-25-2016

The National Weather service has posted Red Flag Warnings for areas in Maine, Texas, Colorado, Arizona, California, and New Mexico.

wildFire weather 4-25-2016

The maps were current as of 9:15 a.m. MDT on Monday. Red Flag Warnings can change throughout the day as the National Weather Service offices around the country update and revise their forecasts and maps. For the most current data visit this NWS site.

Creating the Aravaipa hand crew

Above: Aravaipa crew superintendent Greg Smith, center in black shirt, briefs the crew on the thinning project in the Garden Canyon area of Fort Huachuca.

The photos and article are by Tom Story

Greg Smith has had more preparation than usual to get his crew ready for the upcoming fire season. He is starting the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) Aravaipa hand crew from scratch and the task is almost complete.

Aravaipa hand crew fire
Greg Smith, superintendent of the Ariavaipa Hand Crew.

“This is unique. I know the overhead, most of the overhead, but we know nothing about any of the seasonals, except on paper”, said Mr. Smith. “We are trying to do a veterans crew and right now the numbers are 75 percent vets”.

“The reason that the numbers aren’t higher”, Mr. Smith continued, “is because there aren’t a whole lot of vets with the experience at those higher GS levels; the captain and squad boss positions. All the old vets have moved on into higher up positions or got away from the fire service in general. So now we’re getting a new group of entry-level folks”.

“I was able to pick up a few non-vets with extensive experience: three or four years on a shot crew, which brings a lot to the table where you are starting a new crew” said Mr. Smith who had learned earlier that “strong overhead is key”.

The crew’s overhead positions are all Jackson Hotshot alumni. Mr. Smith brought with him to Sierra Vista both his assistants, Wade Irish and Ryan Hagenah, one of the squad bosses, Anthony Ashalintubbi, and a former squad boss, Daric Burrwith.

Aravaipa fire crew
Arturo de Leon cuts and Shane O’Farrell swamps as the Ariavaipa crew thins vegetation near a recreation site in the Garden Canyon area of Fort Huachca.

“I think we have a pretty good blend. At least seventy-five percent of the crew have some fire experience. Some of the vets came from the vet program. I picked up quite a few of those folks”, continued Mr. Smith.

Mr. Smith started his wildfire career in Arizona with the Coconino National Forest’s Flagstaff Hotshots in 1993 after serving in the Navy. Two years later he moved to the Globe Hotshots on the Tonto National Forest where he spent the next thirteen years, eventually becoming the crew’s superintendent in 2001.

In late 2007, he moved to the Northwest Fire District, outside of Tucson, AZ to help convert Northwest’s highly regarded Type Two Initial Attack crew into a Type One crew. They achieved Type One status in October of 2009, becoming the Ironwood Hotshots. Mr. Smith ran the crew until the Fire District disbanded the crew in 2014. He then joined the BLM and moved to Mississippi to become superintendent of the Jackson Hotshots.

Aravaipa hand crew fire
Squad Boss Anthony Ashalintubbi (center) coaches Aravaipa crew members Zach Wolf (left) and Sean O’Malley on safe chainsaw handling while limbing of trees on the ground.

According to BLM State Fire Management Officer Kelly Castillo, in 2015 the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) approached the Arizona State office of the Bureau of Land Management about hosting Mississippi’s Jackson Hotshots early in the fire season. “We said yes, but hotshot crews are expensive”, said Mr. Castillo “and being frugal we asked the Gila District folks to find a housing solution”. The district contacted Brad Nicholson, Chief of the Fort Huachuca Fire Department, with the idea of hosting the crew on the Army base adjacent Sierra Vista, Arizona. Chief Nicholson was very enthusiastic about the idea and worked with the base commander to allow the crew to use some available dormitory space. After the BLM and the Army drafted a formal use agreement the Jackson Hotshots completed a successful multi-week tour of southern Arizona in 2015.

“The idea of starting a crew in southern Arizona grew out of bringing Jackson down early in the 2015 season” continued Mr. Castillo, “and since the BLM has a history of having veterans crews, it made good business sense to base them at the Fort”. Besides having the crew be all veterans, the other goal was to have them attain Type One (hotshot) status within three years.

Aravaipa hand crew fire
Cory Hall (left) and Ben Evans work on one of the new saws.

“NIFC allocated the funding for the crew start up and for the remodel of an unused motor pool facility on base” said Mr. Castillo “as well as an increase in annual preparedness funding”.

Mr. Castillo also indicated that the presence of the Aravaipa crew at Ft. Huachuca will serve as a recruiting tool for those in the military looking for opportunities following their military service.

The crew is expected to become available for fire assignments around April 25th.

North Carolina: Whipping Creek Fire

Above: Whipping Creek Fire, April 20, 2016. IMT photo.

(UPDATED at 4:07 p.m. EDT, April 25, 2016)

The Whipping Creek Fire in eastern North Carolina has grown by almost a couple of thousand acres, to 15,449, since we wrote about it yesterday.

On Sunday, two CL-415 water-scooping air tankers made 126 rounds dropping a total of 203,112 gallons of water to strengthen control lines. Firefighters continue to construct and improve containment lines to support and monitor the fire perimeter for flare-ups. There are now 153 personnel assigned to the fire, primarily from the North Carolina Forest Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Below is an excellent map showing the daily progression of the fire.

Whipping Creek Fire pregression map

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(Originally published at 10:13 a.m. EDT, April 24, 2016)

The Whipping Creek Fire has burned 13,773 acres in eastern North Carolina six miles northeast of Engelman and 75 mile east of Greenville. On April 18 two fires on private land merged, and the next day spread onto the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge and the Dare Bombing Range.

On Sunday US Highway 264 will be closed to enable two CL-415 water-scooping air tankers from Minnesota to work on the northeast perimeter of the fire. The aircraft will scoop water from the Alligator River and deliver it to the fire every six minutes, according to the Incident Management Team. Some of the water drops delivered on each run will occur adjacent to US 264.

map Whipping Creek Fire
The yellow dots represent heat detected by a satellite on the Whipping Creek Fire, April 19-22, 2016.
Whipping Creek Fire
Damaged power pole along US 264. IMT photo.

Red Flag Warnings, April 24, 2016

Red Flag Warnings April 24
Red Flag Warnings April 24, 2016.

The National Weather service has posted Red Flag Warnings for areas in Maine, New Hampshire, Texas, and New Mexico. Fire Weather Watches (the yellow areas on the map above) warn of possible Red Flag Conditions on Monday in New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Texas.

Fire Weather Forecast April 24

The maps were current as of 7:20 a.m. MDT on Sunday. Red Flag Warnings can change throughout the day as the National Weather Service offices around the country update and revise their forecasts and maps. For the most current data visit this NWS site.