Las Conchas fire photos

Las Conchas fire June 29, 2011
An engine crew from the Los Padres National Forest works from their Model 60 engine on the Las Conchas fire June 29, 2011

These photos were taken by Kari Greer for the U. S. Forest Service at the Las Conchas fire in northern New Mexico. These photos and others are available at ForestPhoto.com

P3 air tanker
A BLM lead plane precedes a P3 air tanker, marking the drop area with smoke, July 15, 2011, on one of the last P3 missions before Aero Union closed up shop.
P3 air tanker
A P3 air tanker, July 15, 2011
P2V making a drop
A P2V making a drop, July 15, 2011

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Every firefighter should visit a Burn Center

When I was going through EMT training in San Diego, part of the course required spending time in an emergency room in a hospital. I chose University Hospital (UCSD Medical Center) because it was the busiest ER in the county. While I was there I checked out their regional Burn Center, and it was a very sobering experience. A third degree burn is one of the most serious injuries a firefighter can experience. Some of the treatments can be as painful than the initial burns, and they may be required for weeks on end. Recovery can take months, or more.

After that visit, I made a promise to myself that I would do everything humanly possible to avoid putting anyone working for me in a Burn Center.

Every firefighter should visit one.

Eagle fire pictures, part 5

Eagle fire, Palm Canyon
Palm Canyon. 1:55 P.M., July 22, 2011

These are pictures of the Eagle fire which burned between Warner Springs and Borrego Springs, California. They were taken from Borrego Valley east of the fire by “Lone Ranger”.

Eagle fire water drop
One of the last helicopter water drops on the Eagle fire. 5:32 p.m., July 27, 2011
Eagle fire in Henderson Canyon
Henderson Canyon, 8:08 p.m. July 23, 2011
Eagle fire, Henderson Canyon
Henderson Canyon, 12:10 a.m. July 26, 2011

Thanks go out to “Lone Ranger”

Services held for Trampus Haskvitz (updated)

Trampus S. Haskvitz
Trampus S. Haskvitz, 1987 - 2011

Tuesday afternoon the life of Trampus Haskvitz was celebrated at Hot Springs, South Dakota. Trampus was killed in the line of duty on the Coal Canyon fire northeast of Edgemont, SD on August 11 when he became trapped between a spot fire and the main fire.

The services were held at the Mueller Center in front of a standing room only crowd. There were an estimated 1,300 people in the main auditorium plus an additional 400 who watched it on video in another room.

Speakers during the service included South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard, Joe Lowe director of the South Dakota Wildland Fire Suppression Division, Trampus’ brother Ben, and Chaplin Morris Nelson.

While Trampus was a firefighter with the state of South Dakota, the Coal Canyon fire is primarily on U. S. Forest Service land and is listed as a USFS-responsibility fire. The USFS sent a sizeable delegation of high-ranking personnel, including Tom Harbour the Director of Fire and Aviation, and various regional officials, including, I believe, a couple of Regional Foresters.

The Rapid City Fire Department assisted with the planning of the services and also supplied the Honor Guard.

After the services in the Mueller Center, a procession of over 130 fire department vehicles escorted Trampus to the cemetery. Unlike most fire department funerals, most of the trucks were brush engines, rather than structure rigs.

The Rapid City Journal has had extensive coverage of this tragedy, and that continued with their excellent article in Wednesday’s paper written by Kevin Woster. Here is an excerpt:

They buried a hero here Tuesday, on a summer day that began with smoke from the fire that killed him hanging in the air above this Southern Hills town.

Trampus Haskvitz, 23, a Buffalo Gap native remembered for his strong heart, gentle spirit and fearless approach to life, died last Thursday fighting the Coal Canyon Fire in the rugged canyon lands near Edgemont.

And smoke from that waning blaze, which was 95 percent contained on Tuesday, created a hazy beginning to a day that drew hundreds of firefighters to say goodbye.

Chaplain Morris Nelson noted the poignant presence of that smoke during a memorial service for Haskvitz at the Mueller Center Auditorium.

“Trampus died last Thursday fighting the fire you can still smell,” Nelson said to about 1,500 people in the packed auditorium.

The crowd included Rapid City Mayor Sam Kooiker, who sat with officers from the city fire department and police department, which just last week buried two of its officers slain in a North Rapid gunfight that draped the city in sadness.

The death of Haskvitz heaped tragedy upon tragedy. And Chaplain Nelson urged those who knew and loved him to remember Haskvitz and his sacrifice whenever they saw or smelled a fire.

Nelson was joined by a fire commander, a governor, a teacher and a brother in offering eulogies to Haskvitz, a college football player who honed that athleticism in seasonal firefighting work for the state Wildland Fire Suppression Division.

In his eulogy, Gov. Dennis Daugaard turned to the John Donne poem “No Man is an Island” and its powerful message of interconnectedness, particularly “any man’s death diminishes me because I am involved in mankind.”

The ending of the poem, “never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee” was especially personal, because the memorial service ended with a traditional firefighter’s “last alarm.”

On a shining fire bell near Haskvitz’ casket, an honor squad member from the Rapid City Fire Department rang a sequence of three rings three times, concluding the service as many wept.

Other articles in the Rapid City Journal:

The video below shows the first 15 minutes of the 18-minute procession as it passed by my location (YouTube has a 15-minute limit). The fire trucks begin showing up at 2:10 minutes into the video.

Here are some photos I took on Tuesday.

Trampus Haskvitz funeral
Firefighters entering the services.
Trampus Haskvitz funeral
Engines staged before the services.

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