

Nettles said Cal Fire air crews and contractors were pushing hard, but able to keep up without exceeding the strict limits imposed for safety, including a maximum daily on-duty limit of 14 hours, with no more than seven hours of actual daily flight time allowed for each pilot. “Praise be to the little guys who can get in there.” “Our mechanics asked us not to fly.”Ĭolby said that the largest air tankers, including The Spirit of John Muir and the DC–10 operated by 10 Tanker tend to steal the show, their sheer size and the massive volume of fire retardant they can drop creating stunning visuals, but he also singled out for praise the much larger numbers of smaller aircraft in the aerial arsenal, helicopters and fixed-wing turboprops that can navigate the narrow canyons and other tight spots. They only stopped when the smoke got so thick that it limited visibility and endangered the turbine engines. “In the first days of the fire, we were flying eight hours a day, seven days a week,” Colby said. He said in a telephone interview September 16 that the outbreak had created huge demand from the company’s news media customers for aerial views of the rapidly advancing fires, and the firefighting efforts. and is based in Hayward, California, filmed the massive tanker in action, in a video posted August 20 that had been viewed 2.8 million times by September 16. Photographer Walter Colby, who works for Helicopters Inc. YouTube users posted many videos, including this one taken by a helicopter showing two drops by The Spirit of John Muir, a Boeing 747 operated by Global SuperTanker, a Colorado company that deploys the world’s largest firefighting aircraft on contracts around the world. The agency’s aerial assets were fully engaged. “Right now, I couldn’t even give you an accurate number.”Ĭal Fire’s online overview of active incidents on September 17 listed 12 fires at least 17,000 acres in size. Typically, there might be two or three major fires at any given time. “It’s not just the number of acres, it’s the amount of fires that we have, the sheer number at the same time,” Nettles said. Joshua Nettles, promoted in December to his post of division chief for tactical air operations, said in a telephone interview September 15 that the record-setting size of the largest fires was only part of the story. Cal Fire ground and air crews were working alongside federal partners, with crews from Canada and Mexico also pitching in as the Golden State faced historic destruction. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, better known as Cal Fire, had achieved 30 percent containment of the August Complex by September 16, the largest of many fires across the state that had burned more than 3 million acres.

An online map of active fires made it clear why smoke from the West Coast darkened skies all the way to New York, at times reducing local visibility to a quarter-mile or less on clearer days, firefighting aircraft of all sizes worked in concert with ground crews, dropping millions of gallons of retardant and water, their exploits covered by local media and celebrated on social media. For the year to date, as of September 16, 42,363 fires and 6.9 million acres had burned, according to the agency’s website, with 79 active fires across the country. The National Interagency Fire Center on September 16 listed 10 states with active, large fires engulfing about 4.4 million acres. As of September 17, the factory was open and working to catch up on customer orders.

The company continued to post daily updates on the status of operations. Hughes had at one point been poised to scramble to safety himself, warned by officials to get packed and ready to go at a moment’s notice. At least one member of the company’s staff of about 80 people had lost their family’s home, and others were still waiting to return to evacuated areas and learn the fate of their own property. “A very significant portion of our staff has been affected by this, outside of work,” Hughes said. Calmer winds allowed smoke to hang heavily over the ravaged landscape, limiting visibility to a quarter-mile or even less, temporarily grounding the air attack.Ī few days before, the winds had been “howling,” driving fires rapidly across tinder-dry vegetation and consuming homes and threatening cities. Rain had not yet arrived, but “the big difference now is, the winds aren’t blowing.” “The fire progression has slowed significantly, which is good,” said Greg Hughes, who handles media and marketing for Van’s, in a telephone interview September 15.
