To all the firefighters reading...Thank you for serving your community and thanks for all of the effort to travel and support distant communities in need. We appreciate you so much.
I grew up fighting fire on the fremont winema nf southern oregon this is by far woord for word how we wer taught and what we went by day by day on how we react to icidents.period.so happy to be trained by the best from fs type 1 management all the way to three.your ic is your best friend if you listen
I realize this may be asking a lot, but can somebody direct me to an after-action video explaining the tactics used an a specific fire? I am eager to learn how decisions and execution of firelines, backburns, etc. are made given a specific event, and narrative on how decions were made based on wind, topo, moisture, fuels...followed be a review of how the decions worked out, or didn't go as planned, and then what was learned. Respectfully, thanks, in advance!
Considerations of risk here seem pretty general. Almost seems like they're saying that by capitalizing on group dynamics through good communication, you can reduce your risk. Specifically through timely intelligence up the chain of command. But nothing exactly substantive or technical here. And I don't mean technical as in wildland firefighting, I mean technical as in risk management technical. Annie Duke, Nasim Taleb, and others, even Chris Voss in a way, have made the technical side of risk management fairly accessible to the public. Hopefully some of these concepts will become more engrained in emergency services agencies and businesses.
finally a mini-doc that illustrates the complexity of wildland fire. Props to whoever pieced this together.
To all the firefighters reading...Thank you for serving your community and thanks for all of the effort to travel and support distant communities in need. We appreciate you so much.
I grew up fighting fire on the fremont winema nf southern oregon this is by far woord for word how we wer taught and what we went by day by day on how we react to icidents.period.so happy to be trained by the best from fs type 1 management all the way to three.your ic is your best friend if you listen
I realize this may be asking a lot, but can somebody direct me to an after-action video explaining the tactics used an a specific fire? I am eager to learn how decisions and execution of firelines, backburns, etc. are made given a specific event, and narrative on how decions were made based on wind, topo, moisture, fuels...followed be a review of how the decions worked out, or didn't go as planned, and then what was learned. Respectfully, thanks, in advance!
Pure badassness, ain’t nothing like it.
Considerations of risk here seem pretty general. Almost seems like they're saying that by capitalizing on group dynamics through good communication, you can reduce your risk. Specifically through timely intelligence up the chain of command. But nothing exactly substantive or technical here. And I don't mean technical as in wildland firefighting, I mean technical as in risk management technical. Annie Duke, Nasim Taleb, and others, even Chris Voss in a way, have made the technical side of risk management fairly accessible to the public. Hopefully some of these concepts will become more engrained in emergency services agencies and businesses.
thank you
Dam I want to go back to fighting fires now I want to try fighting wild land fires now
Are a structure firefighter