Spring Is On The Way! Tis The Season For Wildfire
By LoLo Paige
LoLo is a contemporary and romantic suspense author. To read the first few chapters of Alaska Spark, click HERE or visit LoLo's Webpage to sign up for her newsletter.
It's almost time for "break-up" in Alaska, the herald of spring up in these parts. That means a couple of things.
First,
we gain daylight up here in mass quantities each day, all the way to Summer
Solstice in June. Alaskans celebrate Summer Solstice with enthusiasm because after
our long, dark winter, all-night sunlight is our much-anticipated reward! Extended
daylight wakes up dormant trees and bushes, spurring new growth in our spruce, birch,
and willow. (I still marvel at the miracle that ANY plant up here can survive
the ruthless winter temperatures. I sincerely believe it is one of the Wonders
of the World).
Second,
we warm up, which is another delight. And third…well, the warmth also brings in
our wildfire season. We have two susceptible periods of fire season up here:
Pre-green-up, the time between break-up, where ice breaks up on our lakes and
rivers, and when trees and bushes pop buds and leaf out. It’s super dry during
this time, creating low fuel moisture for wildfires.
The
second susceptible period for fire is in May and June, when the sun does its
thing of never dipping below the horizon line. Temperatures can rise in Southcentral
Alaska in Anchorage to the high 80s, and in the Interior near Fairbanks, in the
90s. This shocked me the most when I fought fires in the Interior. How can it
get so hot in Alaska, of all places? One summer I worked loading fire equipment
into airplanes in Fort Yukon in 97 degree heat.
Our state land mass of 663,268 square miles equates to a ton of action with lightning-caused wildfires, as it does around the Lower Forty-eight western states. Last summer, smoke was so dense in Anchorage from all the fires, that we had severe health advisories, and no one could open their windows. We had several weeks of a rare, 90-degrees. A historic moment: Alaskans overran Costco and Home Depot, desperate for fans to stay cool. Such a rare event they reported it on Channel 2 News!
Growing
up in western Montana, wildfire was just as common. I began as a seasonal
firefighter with the U.S. Forest Service and fought fires in Montana, Idaho,
and California. I later transferred up to Alaska and worked for the U.S. Bureau
of Land Management, Alaska Fire Service, fighting fire in Alaska’s Interior.
When fires happen you are dispatched with your fire crew when requests are made for resources. Most fires are small and require less staff, but in recent years with the hotter, drier summers, fires have quickly grown to massive proportions, as we’ve seen in California, Washington, Montana and other states in the arid West.
Part
of our fire training was to work with public outreach to educate homeowners on
the urban-rural fire interface, where neighborhoods border wildlands. We made
sure homeowners understood the importance of defensible space around their
homes.
If
you live in an area that is susceptible to wildfires, or bush fires, as Australians
call them, it’s a good idea to create “defensible space” around your home. That
is, remove all trees and other vegetation within a parameter at least 30 feet
or greater, if possible, from your house. And never, ever store your firewood
next to your home. You can Google videos of what happens when a wildfire comes
through and the firewood stack ignites.
When
fires reach trees and crown from tree to tree, rooftops can ignite if trees are
too close. The National Fire Protection Association has specific actions to take
to prepare homes for protection against wildfires:
https://www.nfpa.org/Public-Education/Fire-causes-and-risks/Wildfire/Preparing-homes-for-wildfire
Much
of my novel is inspired by true events. My husband and I were both firefighters
in Montana, so I had lots to draw on for the romance *smiley face.*
Despite
the back-breaking work and sometimes being terrified on the fireline, I loved
my time as a wildland firefighter. It was something I never dreamed was
possible or I thought I could do. But growing up in the Rocky Mountains with the
romantic notion of working in the great outdoors was something I couldn’t
resist.
When
I fought fire, I was fortunate to have good leadership and crew bosses who knew
fire behavior and always kept safety a priority. I enjoyed the give and take
between everyone on a crew, regardless of gender. I worked on a crew where everyone
respected each other’s boundaries.
As
a female, it was a constant challenge to prove I could do the physical aspects
of a job traditionally done by males. Sometimes I worked with old-school thinkers
who thought women had no place on a fire line. I worked hard to prove myself to
them. Most came around, but there was always that one holdout. I write about
this in the novel. Now it’s commonplace for women to work on fire crews. An all-woman
fire crew from Montana came to Alaska last summer to fight fires.
As our Alaska fire season progresses, I cross my fingers that homeowners and firefighters will be okay, and no more homes will be lost.
When
I watch the evening news and see lines of firefighters in yellow Nomex shirts, shouldering
heavy packs and gripping their Pulaskis, I’ll pray they’ll be okay, no matter
where they are fighting fire.
They will forever be my heroes.
For a behind-the-scenes experience on what it’s like to be a wildland firefighter, read Alaska Spark, available on Amazon
Alaska Inferno, the second book in the Blazing Hearts Wildfire Series, is now available for Pre-order
3 comments:
Great post, LoLo! And thanks for the pointers--we all need to be fire safe.
Welcome to the Genre-istas!
Lynn
Thanks for the tips to be safer if there one lives in wild/forest fire areas. If I'd been asked, I'd have said fall was more of a fire season in Alaska than spring or early summer. Always good to learn new things.
I've just moved to Los Angeles, and California has seen its fair share of fires.
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