Monday, June 17, 2019

Wildland firefighter safety: 18 Situations that Shout Watch Out

I wrote about the 10 Standard Firefighting Orders on June 14th, today I will write about the 18 Situations that Shout Watch Out. According to an article from the National Park Service which lists both the 10 Standard Firefighting Orders and the 18 Situations that Shout Watch Out:

These 18 situations are more specific and cautionary than the Standard Firefighting Orders. If firefighters follow the 10 Standard Firefighting Orders and are alerted to the 18 Watch-Out Situations, much of the risk of firefighting can be reduced.

The 18 Situations that Shout Watch Out are:

    1.   Fire not scouted and sized up.
    2.   In country not seen in daylight.
    3.   Safety zones and escape routes not identified.
    4.   Unfamiliar with weather and local factors influencing fire behavior.
    5.   Uninformed on strategy, tactics, and hazards.
    6.   Instructions and assignments not clear.
    7.   No communication link with crew members or supervisor.
    8.   Constructing line without safe anchor point.
    9.   Building fireline downhill with fire below.
    10. Attempting frontal assault on fire.
    11. Unburned fuel between you and fire.
    12. Cannot see main fire; not in contact with someone who can.
    13. On a hillside where rolling material can ignite fuel below.
    14. Weather becoming hotter and drier.
    15. Wind increases and/or changes direction.
    16. Getting frequent spot fires across line.
    17. Terrain and fuels make escape to safety zones difficult.
    18. Taking a nap near fireline.

Here is a short video about the 18 Situations that Shout Watch Out from the National Wildfire Coordination Group, Wildfire Safety Training Annual Refresher. It is just over six minutes.


Direct link to video