![]() ‘It isn’t just a job.’įor a Hotshot crew, a typical day begins before dawn. ![]() ‘When you become a Hotshot, it becomes a part of you,’ the 40-year-old former logger said. To Moore, the Hotshots’ motto says it all: ‘Safety, Teamwork, Professionalism.’ ‘I love the outdoors and I love feeling that I have a part in protecting the public lands out there,’ Hess, superintendent of the Tatanka Interagency Hotshot Crew out of Custer, S.D., said last week from the front lines of a wildfire in Colorado. Others, like Brandon Hess, are drawn by a sense of duty. And before you know it, you’re around the fire.’įor many, like the three Prescott crew members who were following in their fathers’ footsteps, firefighting is literally in their blood. And when you get 20 people all firing with some synergy, those 20 bites at a time add up. ‘You just chink off a little bit and chink off a little more. ‘How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time,’ said Moore, superintendent of the Pleasant Valley Interagency Hotshot Crew out of Mesa. On Tuesday, firefighters from across the nation will join with the men’s families, Vice President Joe Biden and other dignitaries to honor the men. But then there’s that one day that you may not come home.’įor 19 members of Prescott’s Granite Mountain Hotshots, that day came June 30, when they were overrun while battling a blaze on a ridge in nearby Yarnell. ‘Why do they even do this kind of work that’s so highly dangerous? Every day it might not be. ‘You ask yourself: Why are these people willing to put their lives on the line? For people they don’t even know?’ retired teacher Sharon Owsley asked last week as she stood on the courthouse square in this town north of Phoenix. It is no different in the wildland firefighting community, where men and women armed with little more than axes, shovels and chain saws face mountainsides engulfed in flames and, somehow, hope to bring that force of nature to heel. They are, as we see time and again, the first ones into a disaster and the last ones out. Immortalized in movies such as ‘Hellfighters,’ ‘Backdraft’ and ‘Ladder 49,’ they do things that most people could never conceive of doing. In American culture, the firefighter is almost a mythic being. ‘It is really not possible to see the center of a blowup because the smoke only occasionally lifts,’ the late Montana author wrote, ‘and when it does all that can be seen are pieces, pieces of death flying around looking for you – burning cones, branches circling on wings, a log in flight without a propeller.’ – In his book, ‘Young Men and Fire,’ Norman Maclean attempted to convey what a crew experiences in the chaos of a mountain firestorm.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |