390 likes | 510 Views
2005-2006 FIREFIGHTER REFRESHER. CONTENTS. OBJECTIVE FUEL TYPES AND SUPPRESSION TACTICS THRESHOLDS AND POCKET CARDS. OBJECTIVE.
E N D
CONTENTS • OBJECTIVE • FUEL TYPES AND SUPPRESSION TACTICS • THRESHOLDS AND POCKET CARDS
OBJECTIVE • Provide wildland firefighters with information on fuel types and tactics that apply to Texas. Providing local information on fuel types and tactics will result in a safer work environment for firefighters in Texas
MAJOR FUEL TYPES • Brush with Grass Understory • Pine Plantations • Grass • Cutover • Pine/Hardwood • Southern Rough
BRUSH AND GRASS UNDERSTORY • Importance of Fuel Moisture, Relative Humidity, Weather • 10 HR Fuel Moisture less than 7% • Relative Humidity less than 15% • Direct Attack Impossible • Indirect with good anchor point using dozers • Expect rapid rate of spread
Using Engines if conditions permit • Foam or wet water • Water source or tender nearby • Use 2 Engines in tandem • Adequate resources if going direct • Rough terrain slow progress • Threat of reburn
2 points to remember with weather • Watch wind for change in speed/direction • Watch relative humidity reaching critical threshold limits • Grass primary fire carrier • Brush adds to mop-up difficulty • Brush component varies: pinyon, juniper, mesquite, young southern pine, hardwood, live oak
PINE PLANTATIONS • Tactics vary depending on • Weather • Environmental conditions • Height of plantation trees • Effects rate of spread (ROS), intensity, crowning, control problems • Use of LCES, Standard Fire Orders, 18 Watch Out Situations
PLANTATION TREES LESS THAN 4 FEET • Grass primary carrier • Rate of spread high • Intensity low to medium • Wind speed less than 8 mph-Direct Attack • Wind speed 8-12 mph-Parallel Flank Attack • Wind speed greater than 12 mph-Indirect Attack • Fire Weather thresholds • 20 foot winds 8-10 mph or higher • RH 30% or less
PLANTATION TREES 4-10 FEET • Rate of spread high • Intensity medium to high • Resistance to control medium to high • Torching/crowning medium to high • Spotting a problem • Wind speed less than 8 mph-Direct Attack • Wind speed 8-12 mph-Parallel Flank Attack • Wind speed greater than 12 mph-Indirect Attack • Fire Weather Thresholds • 20 foot wind 8-10 mph or higher • RH 30% or less
PLANTATION TREES 10-30 FEET • Rate of spread medium-normally • Intensity medium to high • Resistance to control high • Crowning medium to high • Frequent spotting (control problem) • Presence of ladder fuels • Fire creates it’s own wind • Extremely dangerous fuels
Indirect Attack during extreme burning conditions Fire Weather Thresholds 20 foot winds 8-10 mph or higher RH 30% or less
PLANTATION TREES 30 FEET OR GREATER • Fire behavior in the Timber Group • Rate of spread medium-normally • Intensity medium to high • Resistance to control low to medium • Torching/crowning possible • Wind speed will determine-Direct, Parallel Flank or Indirect Head Attack • Fire Weather Thresholds • 20 foot wind 8-10 mph or higher • RH 30% or less
GRASS FUEL TYPES • Flat to rolling terrain • Using Engines in tandem • Pinching the head of fire • Use of Motor Graders
Weather Conditions for Grass Fires • Depends on Fuel Moisture and RH • RH less than 30% grass burns readily • RH less than 20% grass burns extremely well
Safety Concerns • Grass fires can produce extreme flame lengths (FL) and rate of spread (ROS) • Flank can become head with wind change • Best to anchor and flank the fire
CUTOVER AND SLASH • Primarily logging in pine stands • Drought causes intensity and control problems
TACTICS • Use of existing roads and skid trails • Slow line construction rate with dozer • Thorough mop-up • Use of Engines for mop-up, if possible • Spotting a problem
PINE/HARDWOOD FUELS • Occurs in East Texas, Bastrop, Colorado, Fayette, and Lee counties • Under story of yaupon and heavy needle drape • Canopy height of 60 feet or less • Fires usually fuel driven • Topography a problem in Central Texas • Active fire behavior when RH in lower 40% range • Extreme fire behavior when RH below 20% • Live fuel moisture in yaupon below 120%
TACTICS • Hand tools possible when fire behavior minimal and fire small • Engines limited by access • Tractor plows used for direct attack when low to moderate fire behavior • Use roads and burning out with low RH
SOUTHERN ROUGH FUELS • Usually found in South East Texas • Can create explosive conditions • Tractor plows used mostly • Limited use of Engines • Burn out line as go
Weather concerns for Southern Rough • Can burn with RH 60% or greater • Crown fires possible in severe drought • Fire Behavior Thresholds • 20 foot wind 8-10 mph or greater • RH 30% or less
Predictive Service Areas Weather Thresholds- RH 30% or Less, 20 foot wind speed 10 mph or more KBDI
Thresholds • Predictive Service Areas • Dead Fuel Moisture • Fire Weather-Wind-speed, Humidity • NFDRS-ERC, BI • KBDI • Live Fuel Moisture Weather Thresholds- RH 30% or Less, 20 foot wind speed 10 mph or more KBDI
Pocket Cards • Fire Danger Area • ERC-90th Percentile • ERC-Years to Remember • What Fire Danger Tells You • Past Experience
What the heck does all this mean? • Can we apply it to the “ real world”?
Look on Page 68 of your Incident Response Pocket Guide
Relative Humidity (RH) will be between 15% and 30% in Gilmer today… An Average Flame Length will be over 10 feet in Gilmer today… 20 foot Wind will be above 10 MPH in Gilmer today… 10-Hour Fuels will be between 5% and 7% in Gilmer today… Energy Release Component (ERC) will be above the 75th Percentile in Gilmer today… Adjective Fire Danger for Gilmer today… VERY HIGH
Relative Humidity (RH) will be between 15% and 30% in Gilmer today… 10-Hour Fuels will be between 5% and 7% in Gilmer today… Now look at the “Relative ease of chance ignition and spotting; general burning conditions” column on page 68 of the Incident Response Pocet Guide.