This is the fourth article in a four article
series, to read Part One, go HERE, for Part Two, click HERE, for Part Three, click HERE. Additionally, this article assumes that
you do not have, nor have you been trained in the use of, a USDA Forest Service
Fire Shelter, and does not discuss the use of this device -- Author’s Note
But If You
Can't Escape...
Okay, so you ignored the warnings, didn’t see the smoke, and were
surprised by the flames...worse yet, you’re cut off from your escape
route. You’re trapped, now what?!
DO NOT
PANIC
First off, DO NOT PANIC, stay calm. Panicking will just get you dead.
Don’t
run blindly!
Escape from the fire, if possible, but don’t run blindly. If the flame
front is still far enough away, and an escape remains open, use it! However, remember you won’t be able to outrun the flames, so don’t even try. And if you are already trapped, or the flames are too close and moving too fast for you to escape, you are better off spending your remaining few seconds finding or preparing a shelter spot.
The
Krispy Kritter Klub
If you’ve waited until you were trapped, or until the flames of the
forest fire were too close to escape from, then you are going to get burned,
and it’s going to hurt a lot!
The Krispy Kritter Klub is a club nobody wants to belong to, but right
now, you’re going to have to choose between being a surviving member of the
Krispy Kritter Klub or being granted membership, posthumously. Either way you get to be a member, aren’t you
lucky!
Forest fires produce superheated air, toxic gases, and smoke, all of
these can quickly destroy your vulnerable lungs and airways, so your primary
goal should be to always protect your airways.
So,
what do you do if cornered by a fire?
Find
the safest spot possible
If you are cornered by a fire, find the safest place possible to
shelter, as quickly as possible.
Shelter on the fire-side of a road cut.
If areas like this aren’t available, then find the most open area possible and scrape away any dry fuels to make your own clearing and fire shelter trench. Scrape out a fire shelter trench, as wide as your body, down to the mineral soil, parallel to the flame-front or sideways to the slope of the hill. Do not dig a trench pointing uphill, as that will channel wind and flames alongside your body. Lying in this shelter trench will minimize the duration of the flames contact, keep the fire further away from you, and the mineral soil will keep your body much cooler than lying on a layer of insulating ground debris and pine needles would.
Clear the edge of the shelter trench closest to the flame-front first, to create a fire break. Because radiant heat transfer decreases inversely with the square of the distance from the fire, clear the ground, at least three feet wider (1 meter) on all sides around your shelter trench. This will reduce the radiant heat transfer to about 11% of the amount received at the edge of the fire.
Lay in the shelter trench, on your face, and try to keep from exposing your skin. Wear gloves and pull shirt cuffs down around your wrists. Turn your collar up and use handkerchiefs to protect your neck and ears. Use extra clothing to cover any exposed skin or cover yourself with dirt or your pack. Cover your ears with your hands and keep your elbows along your sides. Keep your arms tight to your body, fingers together and legs touching. Try to minimize the exposed surface area of your body.
Remember DRY heat is better than WET heat
To prevent panic practice “tactical breathing”, repeating the
numbers silently in your head.
The flame front will shake the ground, and sound like a freight train passing,
the winds it creates will be raging. It
is going to be scary, and it is going to hurt, a lot! So, be prepared for it and don’t jump up. If you do, you will expose yourself to the
flames and the superheated air, and you will die!
The temperature of the flame front will range from 500o to
1,600o F (260o to 871o C), the temperature at
18 inches (45 cm) above the ground, will be between 600o to 900o
F (315o to 482o C), and the ground temperature will be only
between 300o to 500o F (149o to 260o
C). So, stay close to the ground!
Once you commit to a fire shelter, STAY there, no matter how bad it
gets, death is hovering just inches above the ground, waiting to engulf you if
you panic and run. The radiant heat
above you will burn you instantly and the super-heated air and toxic fumes will
destroy your lungs!
Motor vehicles as shelters
If you are trapped in your vehicle by a fast approaching flame front, look
for ridges, rocky outcroppings, or wide spots in the road and park on the
uphill side of it.
Buildings
as shelters
You can use wooden buildings as shelters, sheltering inside their
interiors, only if they are surrounded by light, fast burning fuels. If they are surrounded by heavy slow burning
fuels, which will sustain a longer flame front, then sheltering inside them
would be a poor choice.
Don’t forget to come back next week and read “You Can Hear the
Bastards Buzzin’...©, where we will talk about the most dangerous creature in living
the wilds of North America and most of the rest of the world!
I
hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me
on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE. Don’t forget to follow me on both The
Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE,
and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube. If you have questions, as always, feel free
to leave a comment on either site. I
announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at
bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.
That
is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
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