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What is the Davis Fire Crew?
An organization of United States Forest Service Type-II On-Call Hand Crews
dispatched by the
Mendocino
National Forest to
wildfires across the western
United States. Since 1976, we
have fought forest fires as close as
Lake Tahoe
and as far as
Montana
and
New Mexico.
Each of our nineteen person crews consist of a crew leader, three squad
leaders, four certified chainsaw operators and 11 crew members. The crew is
joined by a Forest Service crew boss.
Our season typically starts in mid-June and can last as late as November, depending on
precipitation and fire potential.
Short job description: We use hand tools and
chainsaws to cut containment lines around wildfires and assist in
"mopping up" the fires once they are out, making sure there are
no hot spots to flare up again.
Long job description: We set up fire camps, carry
water containers, set backfires, tear down fire camps, set up mile-long
hose systems, play cards for hours while waiting for an assignment, hike
around all day looking for smoldering trees, rehabilitate burned areas,
ride in helicopters, on boats, in canoes, on airplanes to and from fires in
places you've never even heard of, spend nights in junior high gyms or
freezing alpine fields, weed the flower beds at a ranger station, have
all-you-can-eat dinners at restaurants or Army rations for three days
straight in the woods, and just generally have a good time being
alternately bored and exhausted in some of the most beautiful country
imaginable all while earning a very respectable hourly wage for the
demanding and dangerous work performed in the interests of protecting
people, property, and natural resources. |