Calling all cooks

New IAWF cookbook needs your recipes

Can there be too many cooks in a fire kitchen? The International Association of Wildland Fire doesn’t think so.

The IAWF will hold its annual national Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy Workshop in Atlantic City, New Jersey from September 16 – 19. Before that, the IAWF (in partnership with the Wildland Fire Leadership Council — WFLC) is asking people to submit recipes for the upcoming “Cohesive Strategy Cookbook” that will be ready in time for the workshop.

But hurry up! Deadline is June 7 and those who submit recipes should provide the following:

        • Name of recipe
        • Ingredients with measurements
        • Step-by-step directions
        • Prep time, cook time, and total time
        • Number of servings
        • Photo of the prepared dish

The association also asks contributors to share the source of recipes if they aren’t original, e.g. Betty Crocker recipes.

You can submit your recipe [HERE].

 Anyone who has been in a fire camp knows firefighters don’t have the privilege of gourmet-level meals. On the contrary, the USFS has received numerous requests to update and elevate firefighters’ food supply. University of Idaho researchers, for example, analyzed standard USFS food vendor menus for fire camps and found that most did not meet firefighters’ nutritional needs, including deficits of micro-nutrients, meals lacking electrolyte balances, and only minimal variety.

El Cariso fuels up

“We expect vendors to provide a variety of healthy options during fire season, but along with that firefighters need to understand that making healthier choices can have an impact on their performance,” researcher Heidi Holubetz said.

The USFS is expected to pass along the requests to their contract caterers  with the hope of making menu modifications for the 2025 contracts. Down the road, researchers hope they can work directly with vendors for future menu updates.

READ MORE: Behind the scenes at a fire camp kitchen

 

 

Uncovered documents reveal first USFS airtanker trials for eastern wildland firefighting

A group of foresters, district rangers, and air operators assembled in Atlanta during the summer of 1962. There they laid the groundwork for the Appalachian Airtanker Project, which helped pave the way for the service to be the most frequent user of airtankers in the country.

The history of airtanker wildland firefighting in the Eastern United States has largely been lost to time, with most documents focusing on Western wildland fires. The first time an airtanker was used to fight wildfires is attributed to California’s Willows Flying Service at the request of the Mendocino National Forest’s FCO in 1955. Four years later, the California Division of Forestry would produce the first in-depth study on the efficacy of airtankers on forest fires. The study found airtanker effectiveness depended on fast dispatching action, reaching the fire while it was small, and good communication between ground and air forces.

Apart from a single-sentence mention of the Appalachian Airtanker Project on the NPS Wildland Fire Timeline, there is no mention of the project online. The only related documents that remain are newspaper clippings and letters found in the Cherokee National Forest and the Great Smokey Mountains National Park’s archives.

“This year, the Park Service and the Forest Service have a weapon new to this area — a firefighting airplane,” a 1962 archived clipping from the Knoxville News-Sentinel said. “The value of air attack on forest fires has been proved in the West. This spring, the U.S. Forest Service is conducting tests in this area.”

The project was the first use of airtankers for fire suppression in the nation’s Eastern states, according to USFS documents.

1966 TBM on the Beaverhead National ForestThe project was created to lay the groundwork and study the feasibility of using a converted Navy TBM in fighting wildfires in the Appalachian mountain area.

The plane was based out of the McGhee-Tyson Air Force Base in Knoxville and cost $159 per flying hour, a pilot’s salary of $4.07 per hour, and around $50 per load of retardant. The project was managed by a fire control aide and regional air officer, and was staffed by a pilot and two laborers who were tasked with mixing and loading the retardants.

Specific guidelines were required to be met for every retardant drop. The TBM could not be used on the head of a hot, rolling brush or timber fire, or when winds exceeded 30 mph, or when visibility was less than one mile. Initial attack was authorized for fires that would cost over $700 to suppress or mop up without airtanker usage or in heavy-fuel fires with a medium to high rate of spread.

TBM airtanker photo © Bill Gabbert
TBM airtanker photo © Bill Gabbert

The project began on January 25, 1962 and continued through May 17 of the same year. Within that window, the Chestnut Ridge Fire ignited and burned in an extremely inaccessible area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Airtanker usage was credited for stopping the fire at only a third of its potential burned acreage. Park Superintendent Fred Overly would use the fire as a specific example for the project’s continuation and future airtanker usage in the Eastern U.S.

“Having seen what the airtanker can do in reducing burned areas to a minimum, we consider the continuation of this project amply justified,” Overly said in a letter to USFS Southern Region Fire Control Chief John Spring. “Without the three extremely effective drops made by Pilot Art Murray, this fire which finally burned 71.5 acres would most likely have burned 200 or more acres. The fire was contained very well by the air drops, and the use of the tanker was well justified.”

A number of related documents on the Appalachian Airtanker Project are posted on our DOCUMENTS page, and for a look at related studies in California, check out the 1959 Fighting Forest Fires with Airtankers report by H.P.Reinecker and C.B.Phillips  Heads up — that one is a 154-page 109MB PDF file.

NOTE: for a serious treasure trove of TBM and other aircraft of this vintage, check out Geoff Goodall’s aviation site.