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During Deployment

Fire Shelter Deployment

“I remember fighting, not just for air, but for something that was cool enough to feel like you could breathe it.”

close up of flames, intense fire.

Figure 1 During a deployment.

Expect the environment to be smoky, hot, loud, windy, and stressful; with blowing ember and hot gases. Expect to be scared. Expect to think that you may be injured or not survive. Expect to have thoughts of your family, friends, and how you ended up in this situation run through your head. All of these are normal reactions to an abnormal situation (see Figure 1).

Once you are in your shelter, you must focus on two things: staying on the ground in the shelter no matter what, and protecting your lungs and airway by keeping your nose and mouth as close to the ground as possible. No matter how bad it gets inside the shelter, it will be much worse outside. If you panic and leave the shelter, one breath of hot gases can be lethal.

“You can see the glow and you can definitely feel it. It’s hard to stay in that shelter. Because they get so hot. But you’ve just gotta keep thinking to yourself, ‘it’s 100 times hotter if you jump out.’ So, that’s the only thing that kept me in there. I was thinking, ‘Well, this is the only thing protecting me right now. I better stay in here.’ ”

 

Turbulence can lift a shelter’s edge, letting in hot gases. Fires can generate winds of 50 miles per hour or more, so you must hold the shelter down firmly. Do your best to hold down the edges of the shelter during the deployment but be aware that you may not be able to keep the edges down at all times. Uneven ground, rocks, and body position all impact how the shelter’s edge can be held down.

Deployments can be extremely frightening and may lead to panic. Panic can cause firefighters to leave their shelters and make a run for it— a far more hazardous gamble than staying put. Control such feelings so you can think clearly. Keep yourself calm by focusing on your breathing or on an object, person, or religious symbol that is meaningful to you. Recite a chant or phrase. These techniques of meditation will help quiet your mind. They can help reduce panic while allowing you to remain alert.

“My instinct said, "you've got to get up, and you've got to get out of here because it's too hot to survive, and if you don't leave you are going to die right now." Then my training said, "you know if it's that hot in here, you can't survive outside, you gotta relax, you gotta calm down, and you gotta take some shallow breaths, and you gotta get close to the ground." ”

 

You may be able to help calm other trapped firefighters by shouting back and forth, or by radio communication – remember shelters limit radio transmission distances. If someone yells at you, try to let that person know you’re okay. If someone doesn’t respond to your shouts, do not leave your shelter. During the fire’s peak, the noise will be deafening. You may be unable to hear anyone. Keep calm. As soon as the noise subsides, resume talking to each other.

Handheld radio performance testing conducted at National Technology and Development Program (NTDP) showed:

  • Line-of-sight transmission distances from inside the shelter were limited to 2000 feet for both send and receive mode.
  • Shelter-to-shelter communications were limited to approximately 100 feet.
  • Contact of the radio antennae to the shelter further reduced the transmission distances.
  • For better radio transmissions, if fire conditions permit, lift the edge of the shelter and stick the antennae out from underneath. Be careful to not touch the antennae to the shelter or the ground.

Conditions Inside the Shelter

Three shelters side by side in an open field.

Figure 2 During a deployment.

During a deployment, you may notice pinholes present in the shelter’s fabric, or glowing along the shelter’s seams (see Figure 2). Firelight passing through pinholes may appear to be hot coals or embers on your clothing. The pinholes or glow seen around seams does not reduce your protection. No matter how big a hole or tear your shelter may have, you are better off inside the shelter.

In a prolonged deployment or when flames contact the shelter, temperatures inside can rise to uncomfortable, even dangerous levels. Additionally, the shelter material can become hot enough to burn you. Your PPE – helmet, flame-resistant clothing, and gloves – provide you with additional protection.

“I could feel the skin tightening on my face. Mucous was coming out of my nose and eyes, hanging off my chin. I felt like all the fluid was being roasted out of me. My throat was so sore I could barely drink my water.”

 

Use your gloved hands to push the shelter material away from your body to maintain a protective air gap. Shelter material is most likely to contact your feet, buttocks, head, elbows, and hands. It is best to gently shift the points of contact, especially around your feet and elbows, as prolonged contact can result in burns.

 

“And it was hot. But I knew it was bearable. I was able to take it. I knew that I was getting burned but I just…held down there. I just kept thinking of my family. Thinking of my fiancée.”

 

When flames contact the shelter, the adhesive layer of the shelter material may begin to break down. This can allow the foil on the outside of the shelter to peel away, reducing the shelter’s effectiveness. The inner layer of foil prevents gases produced by the adhesive from getting inside the shelter. Remember, in all these scenarios, your best chance of survival is to stay in your shelter, breathe the cool air nearest the ground, and shift your body to minimize the chance of burn injuries.

Moving Your Shelter

Firefighters have moved from one location to another while inside a shelter. Either to change locations as the flame front passes, or to be closer to someone in trouble. This was done primarily by crawling on their bellies while trying to hold the edges of the shelter down. Others have used the shelter as a heat shield while they moved to a new location. You can do very little to help another person during the peak of an entrapment. Keep in mind that moving during an entrapment increases your risk, exposing your airways to hot gases, and should only be undertaken if absolutely necessary.

When to Leave the Shelter

“It [had] cooled down tremendously. I took a peek. I could notice the dramatic temperature change. It went from unbearable to bearable real quickly. And there was still stuff burning around me. Some of the sage was still burning. I decided to stay in my shelter a little longer.”

 
A few scattered shelters setup near a fire.

Figure 3 During a deployment.

All deployment scenarios are different. There is no fixed time to stay under your shelter. Don’t move until the flame front has passed. A drop in noise, wind, heat and a change in the color of light passing through the shelter are tipoffs that it may be safe to leave the shelter. Stay put until temperatures have cooled significantly or a supervisor tells you it’s safe to come out. Leaving a shelter too soon can expose your lungs to superheated air or dense smoke. Deployments have lasted from 10 to longer than 90 minutes. Deployments don’t last as long in light, flashy fuels as they do in dense, heavy fuels. Firefighters have been injured or died when they came out of their shelters too soon.

If you think there has been a decrease in activity outside your shelter, carefully lift the edge and peek out at the external conditions. Be prepared to cover up again if conditions do not allow leaving the shelter. Stay inside a little longer if you have any doubt about leaving the shelter (see Figure 3).

When you leave your shelter, make sure that your supervisor knows the deployment occurred.

“Those things work, and I'm here to tell you they work, and that if you don't know anything else, know that I survived this and you can too. ”

 

Leave your shelter and other equipment in place if you can do so safely. A great deal can be learned from reviewing the circumstances of entrapments and the performance of protective equipment. Learning all we can from each shelter deployment can help us improve procedures and equipment for all firefighters.

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Contact: Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Committee

The NWCG Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Field Guide, PMS 053 provides mitigation practitioners at all experience levels with recommendations on the most effective and efficient ways to accomplish mitigation work in communities at risk to wildfire damage or destruction. The content in this guide was written in coordination with the NWCG Standards for Mitigation in the Wildland Urban Interface, PMS 052.

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NWCG Wildland Urban Interface Mitigation Field Guide, PMS 053 

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NWCG Standards for Wildland Fire Module Operations, PMS 430

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NWCG Standards for Airtanker Operations, PMS 514

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References:

NWCG Aircraft Dispatcher Position Page 

NWCG Expanded Dispatch Coordinator Position Page 

NWCG Expanded Dispatch Recorder Position Page 

NWCG Expanded Dispatch Supervisory Dispatcher Position Page 

NWCG Expanded Dispatch Support Dispatcher Position Page 

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