Otago Daily Times

Firefighte­r back from long battle

- KAY SINCLAIR

A TE ANAU rural firefighte­r reckons several weeks helping fight the largest wildfire in California’s history has given him ‘‘a year’s worth of learning’’.

Hamish Angus (45) arrived home last Saturday after a month with hundreds of other firefighte­rs battling the Mendocino fire in northern California.

He was one of about 100 fire officers — 37 from New Zealand, the rest from

Australia — deployed to California at the beginning of August to help fight the massive Mendocino blaze. He was the only OtagoSouth­land firefighte­r in the group.

The details of the California firefighti­ng effort were different from New Zealand, but the work was essentiall­y the same, requiring similar skills, Mr Angus said.

‘‘One of the benefits for Fenz is the amount we learned while we were there.’’

The day the group arrived, the Mendocino fire was still expanding and had officially become the largest fire in California’s history, covering about 460,000 acres.

After a couple of days recovery and briefing time, the group was divided and firefighte­rs sent to the area where they would be based.

‘‘We were working more in management, supervisor­y and safety officer roles, than actual firefighti­ng, working with the local guys. They were all pretty exhausted,’’ Mr Angus said.

More than 300 firefighte­rs were working on the Mendocino fire where he spent his deployment.

‘‘Logistical­ly, it was a massive operation’’.

During his month there he worked two stints, each of 14 days, with two clear days off in between. He was a safety officer, going out with the crews, keeping an oversight.

‘‘Quite a lot of guidance was needed and bringing in people from outside made it easier to tell the locals to pull out of an area.

‘‘People can get tunnel vision. When a place means a lot to them it’s easy to become blinkered and to try too hard to save it, resulting in risks being taken.’’

Mr Angus described fighting the fires as like a chess game — a longterm campaign with a lot of strategy.

Allied to direct firefighti­ng work, containmen­t teams worked several kilometres away. They were specialist­s involved in creating fire breaks, using aircraft to suppress flames and slow down the blaze — ‘‘to buy time’’.

‘‘There’s only one way to learn to fight such fires — that’s to do it,’’ Mr Angus said.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? At the ready . . . Te Anau rural firefighte­r Hamish Angus (centre front) with some of his US military firefighti­ng team, ‘‘Rugged’’, ready for another day of fire containmen­t in Northern California.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED At the ready . . . Te Anau rural firefighte­r Hamish Angus (centre front) with some of his US military firefighti­ng team, ‘‘Rugged’’, ready for another day of fire containmen­t in Northern California.
 ?? PHOTO SUPPLIED ?? Keeping a lookout . . . Two members of an internatio­nal firefighti­ng team waiting for the front to arrive during the battle with Mendocino wildfire in Northern California:
PHOTO SUPPLIED Keeping a lookout . . . Two members of an internatio­nal firefighti­ng team waiting for the front to arrive during the battle with Mendocino wildfire in Northern California:
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Hard work . . . Firefighte­rs at the Mendocino fire in Northern California take stock of where to create fire breaks to contain the huge blaze.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Hard work . . . Firefighte­rs at the Mendocino fire in Northern California take stock of where to create fire breaks to contain the huge blaze.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand