Lessons Learned: Horse Park Fire Entrapment

Narrow escape from Horse Park Fire in Colorado

 

 

Two crew members were scouting a road for a potential burnout operation when their truck became stuck. They were unable to free the truck before the fire began to overtake them. The crewmember made the decision to abandon the truck and take their gear with them. They fled back down the road and away from the fire. One crew member ran ahead and made it safely back to the other vehicles.

The other crew member dropped his pack, keeping his fire shelter and radio with him. An additional crew member came up the road on a UTV to help him escape. The pair drove to the parking area where the other crew members were waiting in the vehicles.

See also  Wildland Firefighting School

Meanwhile, the crew lookout was forced to flee from the lookout position by the same advance of the fire.

Read the Report

Topics

Narrow escape from Horse Park Fire in Colorado     Two crew members were scouting a road for a potential burnout operation when their truck became stuck. They were unable to free the truck before the fire began to overtake them. The crewmember made the decision to abandon the truck and take their gear with […]

Get The Wildland Firefighter Newsletter

Related Articles

AI: A Wildland Firefighter’s New Best Friend?

AI: A Wildland Firefighter’s New Best Friend?

Nikki Davidson - Government Technology May 6—Human perception has its limits against the unpredictability of a wildfire start. But with artificial intelligence beginning to play a key role in response, the question becomes: Could AI outperform humans in determining...