The Fire Line: Wildfire in Colorado

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 344

  • @kenh5211
    @kenh5211 6 років тому +24

    I live in Colorado Springs on the west side for 16 years as of 1 year ago. I remember watching this on the news. I had no idea how bad it really was. So much respect for the men and women fighting fires and saving lifes and much respect for future firefighters like myself.

  • @Mis-AdventureCH
    @Mis-AdventureCH 7 років тому +170

    Excellent piece of journalism. Absolutely outstanding.

    • @ARTISTCHD1
      @ARTISTCHD1 6 років тому +1

      SON of SOLARSUN +SPIRIT SOUL SACRED SCRIPTS: Strictly stating, specifically speaking and solemnly saying; Separatists and segregationists stay off and out of our primary prehistoric-properties. Y’all aren’t at all welcome nor invited into, Indigenous inhabitants, inclusively inferred; “Indians” islands inland-s. All arrivals as invidious invaders, insidious intruders, “illegal immigrants”, (uninvited guests), are ordered and commanded to leave these terrestrial terrains - territorial turfs. Voluntarily vacate the planetary premises, immediately, right now today, gdo or die!!!

    • @michaelpass2176
      @michaelpass2176 3 роки тому +1

      Yes it well happen again, God bless you for making those hard decisions!@@ARTISTCHD1

  • @Shinuchiha_99
    @Shinuchiha_99 Рік тому +12

    My cousin lost everything in the Marshall fire last year.. her house, 2 dogs and all of her belongings.. all went up in smoke.. their were wind gusts of up to 127 mph according to measurements taken in left hand canyon that same day.. at points the fire was moving 700yds every 30 seconds and in most cases gave residents only mere seconds to make a dash for the nearest escape.. I sincerely thank the Louisville FD, boco sherriff and the Louisville PD for doing everything they could to try and save my cousins and many others homes.. you guys rushed into those areas when no one else would and saved countless lives.. your job is very tough and it takes special types of people to be first responders!! 🚒👨‍🚒🚔👮‍♂️ The wildfire risk in Colorado will just continue to rise if the state doesn’t work with the ntl forest service to manage forest lands and open space..

    • @virgilbrown5287
      @virgilbrown5287 4 місяці тому

      I’m sorry for her loss I was at a truck in Colorado New Year’s Eve when the Boulder County fire happened. Yes you were correct about the 130 mph winds

  • @nathankahla2724
    @nathankahla2724 5 років тому +10

    This is awesome, as someone who has seen these problems on the ground, this is the best explanation of those problems I have ever seen. I hope many people see this

  • @preston8836
    @preston8836 5 років тому +46

    Those granite mountain calls dropped my heart, the firefighter in me hurt for them. The son in me ached for their children and family

    • @tamarcanady5333
      @tamarcanady5333 5 років тому +4

      I don’t remember hearing these Yarnell transmissions before, that was really rough. They are close to all of our hearts here in Arizona.

    • @ashleyjackson4012
      @ashleyjackson4012 5 років тому +4

      Watch the movie only the brave that heartbreak n

    • @ashleyjackson4012
      @ashleyjackson4012 5 років тому +3

      @@tamarcanady5333 they cut most of the transmission when they air attack told them to quit yelling in the radio and break they didn't want to let u hear how these 19 could of been save

    • @kevintucker1491
      @kevintucker1491 2 роки тому +1

      As a firefighter myself and know the story of Peshtigo here in Wisconsin. It's a history and a family hurt.

    • @Shinuchiha_99
      @Shinuchiha_99 Рік тому

      @@kevintucker1491 happened in glenwood springs in 94.. same situation.. winds shifted and the fire blew up in a direction the firefighters on scene didn’t plan for.. they deployed but the flames were to intense ultimately killing 12 hotshots and two helitaks.. south canyon fire of 94..

  • @bowhunterelk6723
    @bowhunterelk6723 4 роки тому +6

    You are the first person to make a start that makes sence . And those of us that fought fires in the 1960s said this would happen and we were told to shut up.

  • @ConWolfDoubleO7
    @ConWolfDoubleO7 6 років тому +38

    I went through the Black Forest fire and my current home was one of the very few that made it through the Waldo fire. My house in the Black Forest was one of the lucky 17 that got away with only some damage. It was just lucky I and my father were at home the whole day when one of his friends called him and told us it was coming. It was clear that they only saved our house because we actually cleaned up the dead branches. Even then, it was clearly a hard fight because the siding of the house was burned and our water hoses were stretched out all over the place. Now I live right on Flying W, and the videos of that are so eerie.

    • @alan6832
      @alan6832 5 років тому

      Was there plenty of water in the neighborhood? and if so, what made the firefighters think they couldn't defend it?

    • @dj7291993
      @dj7291993 3 роки тому +3

      @@alan6832 Most of Black Forest is well water, there isn’t really hydrants in a lot of it, and the fire was knocking out electricity, which would shut off the well pumps. Waldo Canyon ran into problems of not having enough for the scale they needed, but also having to shut off water in certain areas to keep pressure in others. The heat of those fires was crazy. I remember helping some friends clean up there property in Black Forest, and picking up a dried puddle of aluminum that used to be a ladder.

    • @alan6832
      @alan6832 3 роки тому

      @@dj7291993 Sounds like they either need to dig some ponds or buy more tanker trucks, or both.

    • @jamesheberlein6842
      @jamesheberlein6842 2 роки тому +1

      @@alan6832 what makes you think it was defendable?

    • @alan6832
      @alan6832 2 роки тому

      @@jamesheberlein6842 Putting a man on the moon makes me think that.

  • @npxmnpxm
    @npxmnpxm 3 роки тому +5

    Very good companion piece to Frontline's "Fire in Paradise," which is well worth watching (and also here on UA-cam).

  • @robinblitz5213
    @robinblitz5213 6 років тому +105

    It's been said over and over don't build housing in fire zones period.

    • @MrAdrian13
      @MrAdrian13 5 років тому +3

      You can just brush your property

    • @welderella
      @welderella 5 років тому +14

      Mega rich people, selfishly moving into known fire zones, cry and beg men to lose their lives, so they can lose their house to fire, and just rebuild in the same location, and do it all over again. Saw this cycle over and over in SoCal. Makes me sick. So selfish.

    • @Boskibro
      @Boskibro 5 років тому +6

      @@MrAdrian13 lol brushing your property doesnt stop embers from landing on your house

    • @MrAdrian13
      @MrAdrian13 5 років тому +6

      Jesse A have a metal roof. Then have it plumbed. Get a few lats goin

    • @ashleyjackson4012
      @ashleyjackson4012 5 років тому +5

      Why u think the granite Mount hotshots whole crew except one died in 2013 tryna stop a wildfire that was threatened a small town of yarnell built on a mountain by a whole lot of fuels exc brush

  • @colemarie9262
    @colemarie9262 4 роки тому +7

    Excellent documentary, and great song choice for the beginning.

  • @MicrowavedAlastair5390
    @MicrowavedAlastair5390 6 років тому +7

    I remember when this happened. It made the sun dim enough to look at with the naked eye at around four or five o'clock here in Lincoln, Nebraska. It was a clean, blood-orange disk that didn't look like the sun. It lit up the whole late afternoon sky like it was sunset. I was astounded at the amount of smoke in the air.

  • @seanhanson6478
    @seanhanson6478 4 роки тому +10

    Denver Post coming in strong with a killer documentary. Thanks guys, this was great!!

  • @gringotico24
    @gringotico24 2 роки тому +4

    I lived in Colorado Springs and went through both fires. I did not live in an area that was affected but I'm sure it could have happened in the area I lived in if a fire would have started and spread through the creek area that ran behind my house. For the Waldo Canyon fire I had just left on vacation so missed most of the action from that one. As for the Black Forest fire, I actually watched that fire start up and blow up from my vantage point while working at the Air Force Academy (USAFA). When my co-workers and I saw the first smoke since it started closer to USAFA then spread away from USAFA we knew something was bad. It was a very windy day and once that fire got going it just ran like a chicken with it's head cut off. You could actually smell the smoke for days after the fire. It was one of the only times that we couldn't sleep with our windows open there.

  • @leviathantoobz
    @leviathantoobz 4 дні тому +1

    Because of all the LA fires currently, I came back to this video… and actually I used to be a Hotshot firefighter in California… Not like my opinion means anything, but I still think that this video documentary was way ahead of its time… January 2025 right now and the video was from seven years ago. They really nailed it in this one. It’s worth a watch if you haven’t fully yet. We really created our own fire problem in the west

  • @AaronLKinney
    @AaronLKinney 3 роки тому +5

    I've been a wildland firefighter for the past 4 years In AZ. Our Fire Season use to be only from the end of March to the end of July. Now Our Fire Season Is Year Round. We've Even gotten fire calls to Colorado In December, and it use to be only one fire call to Colorado every Season, Now We get 2 to 3 Fire Calls to Colorado a season.

    • @MyDarkSide62
      @MyDarkSide62 3 роки тому

      It is just insanity how fire season has become a year round event. Where are you based out of? Were you on the Rafael Fire this June? Much Respect for what you do.

  • @Bobbyd0052
    @Bobbyd0052 2 роки тому +1

    I AM A LIL LATE TO THIS ONE ! TREMENDOUS JOB ON THIS !🇺🇲

  • @RobGM2
    @RobGM2 3 роки тому +3

    Surprised they didn't mention the Storm King Mountain Fire. That was a sad day in Colorado.

  • @nicholltupak
    @nicholltupak 4 роки тому +9

    Feel so bad for that firefighter.. think of all the responsibility he must feel. On one hand, his crew’s safety. On the other, all those homes and property 😢 so sad.

    • @nicholltupak
      @nicholltupak 4 роки тому +1

      10:20 breaks my heart

    • @aguy7848
      @aguy7848 2 роки тому

      Unimaginable responsibility. Much respect.

  • @Solarhawke
    @Solarhawke 4 роки тому +12

    Damn. I could not predict the crazy i would encounter in these comments. Also Bravo 33 probably feels like a right dick now doesn't he @12:52 Telling the granite mountain crew to stop hollering. Like sorry bro I'm about to be burned alive.

  • @hammerdown184
    @hammerdown184 6 років тому +35

    Why don't they just change the building codes. Use more fire retardant materials and build large buffer zones around high risk communities.

    • @donaldgray2128
      @donaldgray2128 6 років тому +2

      roof sprinklers

    • @lightningmcqueen181
      @lightningmcqueen181 6 років тому +3

      @@donaldgray2128 Ive actually seen them on the outskirts of L.A. Malibu, thousand oaks area..Built in roof sprinklers.😂.Rich folks and their brilliant ideas . Didn't seem to help though when thousands of acres of fire in all directions descended on those houses..

    • @hairy-dairyman
      @hairy-dairyman 6 років тому +6

      @@lightningmcqueen181 they work to an extent. If you don't maintain your property it'll burn. It's all about probability

    • @MrAdrian13
      @MrAdrian13 5 років тому +1

      Donald Gray metal roof

    • @humanbeingscanb2evil
      @humanbeingscanb2evil 5 років тому +1

      jay Day depending on the winds depends on the buffer zone cause some winds can carry embers for miles,starting spot fires large distances away from the original fire. That’s why wind is such an enemy of fire fighters. Also humidity is another problem. Ok I’ve watched to many fire fighting documentaries.

  • @ranchero5595
    @ranchero5595 2 роки тому +2

    Watching this after getting a front row seat to the Marshall fire is just...mind boggling. We live in scary times

    • @hunter-ho1ku
      @hunter-ho1ku Рік тому

      i genuinely got traumatized from the damage i saw from the marshall fire.. my whole street went up in flames and my childhood home is just a foundation now. so many people me and family friends know have lost their homes and i just dont know if our hometown will ever return to normal. that along with the total terror that was cameron peak and east troublesome, both racing over the CONTINENTAL DIVIDE, and destroying so much of our wildlands and forests, as well as homes.. it's just terrible

  • @leviathantoobz
    @leviathantoobz 3 роки тому +1

    11:00 “its gonna happen again” and it did this Christmas with the Marshall fire…

  • @abrahamrivera3833
    @abrahamrivera3833 3 роки тому +3

    im not 18 but god damn i wanna save the wilderness and save people now i truly know my job thank you

    • @jalifritz8033
      @jalifritz8033 3 роки тому +1

      I don’t know if it exists in the USA, but maybe you could join the voluntary fire brigade. At least in Germany they educate teenagers too.

    • @MyDarkSide62
      @MyDarkSide62 3 роки тому

      Good for you. I just got back from one of the fires in northern California near Redding and it is truly rewarding to help Nature and people. I was in a support role as I am NOT 18 either (more than 3 times that) and it was great to help the firefighters. Follow your gut - it never lies. Respect

  • @jthorson1986
    @jthorson1986 5 років тому +6

    Prevention isn't pretty but it is essential to stop these issues like the camp fire.

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому +1

      camp fire = caused by corporate greed!

  • @community1949
    @community1949 5 років тому +23

    They are now building houses where they didn't used to be and they weren't in those areas for a reason.

    • @JoeyJoJoJr0
      @JoeyJoJoJr0 5 років тому +4

      It can be done if done properly; i.e. thinning out vegetation and creating fire barriers around structures. Instead people buy a chunk of land in the woods and let it get overgrown for 20+ years; waiting until the inevitable happens.

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому +3

      @@JoeyJoJoJr0 that destroys the habitat where houses don't belong in the first place.

    • @JoeyJoJoJr0
      @JoeyJoJoJr0 5 років тому +3

      @@peterf.229 Not if done right. Also, not everyone wants to live in a city run by liberals and full of degenerates.

    • @zuzufitz
      @zuzufitz 5 років тому +3

      @@JoeyJoJoJr0 Grow up

    • @ranakeen9884
      @ranakeen9884 4 роки тому

      The same could also be said for people who build along the coastal areas and along/near the banks of rivers ... then are shocked and devastated when a hurricane wipes them out or it rains and rains and flooding washes them out.
      Those of us who cannot afford the luxury of living near bodies of water and forested areas .... we are the ones who pay the price in higher insurance premiums.
      Don't get me wrong. I feel badly for all these people who have suffered through such devastation, but somewhere along the line we all need to wake up and figure these things out for EVERYONE'S sake.

  • @sophiepalmer-doran344
    @sophiepalmer-doran344 4 роки тому +4

    please be aware that this can cause PTSD "Wildfires can be particularly stressful because the factors that influence their strength and direction can change at any moment. Communities that seem clear of danger can suddenly need to evacuate. Despite well-orchestrated and persistent fire fighting by emergency services personnel, sometimes destruction of life and property is unpreventable. It is common for people who have lived through these circumstances to experience strong emotions. Understanding normal responses to these abnormal events can aid you in coping effectively with your feelings, thoughts and behaviors as you recover from the fire." more info here www.apa.org/helpcenter/wildfire

  • @Colin21233
    @Colin21233 6 років тому +34

    Black Forest June 11, 2103? 19:52 lol

    • @rabidseabee7229
      @rabidseabee7229 6 років тому

      Saw that to lol

    • @ARTISTCHD1
      @ARTISTCHD1 6 років тому

      Furthermore, those who wantonly wish to angrily argue, dispute - disagree and debate these thoughtful decisions, we have let them go to the waysides and washed away and withered wayward. Facing flash floods and ferocious flaming forests fires. Nobody in their right minds are going to come and rescue them; inclusively, firefighters. They’re on their own, based upon what decisions and choices themselves made, thus to stay or leave. Voluntarily vacate - evacuate. No more meaningless mandatory; “forced evacuations”!!!

    • @jeffgo5742
      @jeffgo5742 5 років тому +2

      Colin Dunn just preparing everyone

    • @Hypercube9
      @Hypercube9 5 років тому +3

      You've been warned!

  • @The_Meekster
    @The_Meekster 3 роки тому +2

    the disrespect in this video for the granite mountain hotshots are real. those guys were trying to keep the fire from spreading regardless of what they were trying to keep the fire from does not matter because they were fire fighters. dont say they are not suppose to do something because they died trying to keep this great country safe. until you were in their shoes you dont know what they were suppose to do and not do. those guys are heros because without them and many people like them their would be a lot more fires killing people.

  • @jaelpyykonen7243
    @jaelpyykonen7243 5 років тому +7

    The amazon, Creece, Spain, Portugal, Siberia, BC, Australia, Israel, Turkey etc etc etc etc.

  • @kilroywashere9343
    @kilroywashere9343 3 роки тому +5

    I typically don’t support raising taxes but I feel like their should be a red zone tax, essentially if you want to live in a home in a red zone that’s fine but you have to pay a tax that helps fund the fire departments that protect the land around your property

  • @briankistner4331
    @briankistner4331 3 роки тому +2

    3:03 Kodas make a good point. Thing is now they are letting them burn and that's not working out either. Case in point the Cameron Peak Fire. They jacked around for a good part of the summer not really doing a thing about the fire.. OK, makes sense to a degree. But look on a map. If the fire changes behavior all of a sudden, a lot on communities are in a world of hurt and that's what that fire did. Comes to the edge of Ft. Collins in less than a day and a half and seriously threatened Loveland on another occasion.

    • @hunter-ho1ku
      @hunter-ho1ku Рік тому

      same goes for east troublesome.. the loss of homes in grand lake and granby, as well as the threat to estes and other rural mountain towns was terrifying, and that fire raced at disgusting speeds. we're in desperate needs of better forestry management

  • @jimmyhostetter6024
    @jimmyhostetter6024 4 роки тому +1

    As a “State of Florida Dozer/ plow Firefighter of 26 years,we are all adjusting to climate change.l survived the 1998 wilfire season,spent 20 something hours working fire with #41.John deere 550g opencab.While working fire in Northcali in 2011 l saw a whole mountain combust in 1 minute( it seemed,and saw many Firenado’s,walk across Dozerlines,roads,and fields.In Florida were drying up for the 2020 season🔥

  • @lesliepfeifer8518
    @lesliepfeifer8518 6 років тому +5

    Wow...gripping...respect and gratitude for your amazing service😔💕

    • @ARTISTCHD1
      @ARTISTCHD1 6 років тому

      SON of SOLARSUN +SPIRIT SOUL SACRED SCRIPTS: Strictly stating, specifically speaking and solemnly saying; Separatists and segregationists stay off and out of our primary prehistoric-properties. Y’all aren’t at all welcome nor invited into, Indigenous inhabitants, inclusively inferred; “Indians” islands inland-s. All arrivals as invidious invaders, insidious intruders, “illegal immigrants”, (uninvited guests), are ordered and commanded to leave these terrestrial terrains - territorial turfs. Voluntarily vacate the planetary premises, immediately, right now today, gdo or die!!!

  • @JerryLaw
    @JerryLaw 5 років тому +9

    We do control burn in winter/cooler weather to stop this kind of thing from happening

  • @BA.77777
    @BA.77777 5 років тому +3

    I don’t wish harm on anybody, but it’s very hard to pity folks who risk the lives of fire workers and their family members by building a house in a high risk area. It’s hard to hear anybody talking about individual freedom when that freedom is risking people’s lives. Don’t expect firemen and firewomen to die to save your stuff.

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому +1

      the individusal freedom line pissed me off cause it was clear what he meant is it will be business as usual. the zoning should be made in each state that limits houses on land that houses shouldnt be.

    • @juliehoward7396
      @juliehoward7396 5 років тому

      @@peterf.229 please look at paradise ca. And read all comments.

  • @michaelmetzler3372
    @michaelmetzler3372 3 роки тому +4

    My heart goes out to the lady who lost her son, thank God that heroic fire fighter saved her sons ashes, MASSIVE RESPECT TO THE HERO FIRE FIGHTERS AND BLESSINGS TO ALL INVOLVED IN THESE TERRIBLE FIRES IN COLORADO

  • @DalV
    @DalV 5 років тому +21

    Then they build houses 15 feet apart

    • @lorumipsum1129
      @lorumipsum1129 5 років тому +6

      Made out of wood no less

    • @persephone2706
      @persephone2706 3 роки тому +1

      @@lorumipsum1129 Right? They need to be made out of stucco. There could be some kind of funding or money diverted from taxes towards pushing and helping peoppe build homes in those areas with marterials that don't burn as well as like... wood. I'm not expert. But it could help a bit... Maybe. Maybe not though.

    • @lorumipsum1129
      @lorumipsum1129 3 роки тому

      @@persephone2706 your 100 percent right. Olunfortunately, since you said that taxes or funding would most likely have too be diverted, it will definitely never happen. Because that’s how governments/companies be.

  • @Alleged_Entertainment
    @Alleged_Entertainment 5 місяців тому

    We are currently residing in Longmont facing 3 fires on all sides. Never even thought about fires before this.

  • @rileywilson5392
    @rileywilson5392 5 років тому +2

    Great informative video hope more see this.

  • @walteragentplummer7031
    @walteragentplummer7031 5 місяців тому +1

    ❤Prayers for all

  • @johnrflinn
    @johnrflinn 6 років тому +5

    Every year they set the grass on fire in Nepal and this only burns on the ground and rarely the trees, I walked through one of these fires on a trail with no problem, more like a scene from a Hollywood set. They set these fires early in the Spring never in mid summer.

    • @Kairos_Akuma
      @Kairos_Akuma 3 роки тому

      Yeah it's to prevent.
      In Germany we have wide pits of sand so the fire ideally shouldn't be able to jump. We're I live we have a lot of conifer (I think thats what they called. The needle trees) monocultures. Had one fire there and it got like.. 12 kilometres far. Didn't came to us but you could see the smoke in the skye. And the sandstuff seemed to work

    • @Thechezbailey
      @Thechezbailey 3 роки тому

      @@Kairos_Akuma conifer is correct

  • @williamcap2236
    @williamcap2236 Місяць тому

    I love the pictures of Linkin Park at 4:58 ! Oh man R.I.P. Chester i want those pics !

  • @kmlbcrew7789
    @kmlbcrew7789 4 роки тому +4

    So, the best solution is to build wooden houses less than 15 feet apart in a heavily fire hazardous areas.

  • @KatyaAndersonPhotography
    @KatyaAndersonPhotography Рік тому

    no subtitles or transcription.. good job Denver Post.

  • @dylankolb6835
    @dylankolb6835 2 роки тому

    I lived in Colorado Springs during the Waldo canyon from my window I watched it come over the ridge it was a terrifying sight

  • @leoscheibe5108
    @leoscheibe5108 4 роки тому +1

    Fire in 2103? Overall excellent video with excellent viewpoints shared.

  • @ElizaJane85
    @ElizaJane85 5 років тому +6

    Please folks, build your houses according to your area! I beg! If you build them with heavy heat and flame resistance. It's possible, this is controllable to a point. Families wont lose their homes and firefighters wont lose their lives for fighting house fires.

  • @ElishaPercival
    @ElishaPercival 4 роки тому

    It's so so sad..such a beautiful place

  • @marchofthelorex238
    @marchofthelorex238 4 роки тому +1

    Nature changes it is us who either have to learn to adapt to the change or.

  • @JoeyJoJoJr0
    @JoeyJoJoJr0 5 років тому +4

    Holy shit a film that actually tells it how it is: Fires aren't new, people living in forests IS!

  • @fukputin7739
    @fukputin7739 3 роки тому +2

    Zero sympathy for people who destroy beautiful forests because they want to live in the trees. They expect firefighters to die to save their homes, ridiculous!!!

    • @leviathantoobz
      @leviathantoobz 3 роки тому +1

      As a former hotshot, I can tell you that the shot crew community appreciates your perspective. Blessings and happy new year (2022)

  • @badmonkey2222
    @badmonkey2222 Рік тому +2

    I have zero sympathy for people that build their homes right smack in the middle of a known burn area and then went to act like they're of victim or it's a shocking thing that it happened. I had a friend of mine who took his life savings and built a house in Paradise CA and I told him I said you're either going to die there or you're going to lose everything and literally two months after he finished his house they had the big fire. It's just beyond me and it's the same with people that build on the coast and then cry when it hurricane sweepster house away I mean you just asking for it and I have zero sympathy for you.

    • @hunter-ho1ku
      @hunter-ho1ku Рік тому +1

      people just don't understand nature and how to respect anymore, nor are they able to undertsand how to co-exist in nature without overstepping her boundaries. if you want a dream home somewhere in the line of natural disasters, you have to research, you have to be prepared, you have to understand what you can and cannot do to stay safe. that includes building homes specifically for the regions they're in, planning the safest areas to be placed, and having the awareness to know when your dream is too dangerous to be sustainable. im trying to do work in advocating for better construction standards in tornado alley and dixie alley, and that's certainly something i hope will be handled here too for fire-safe homes, similarly to how australia has strict building codes due to their understanding of where they live, and how frequently bushfires break out.
      people really need to understand their local ecosystems, and respect the will of the earth more. we can't keep losing lives for selfish glamour and material comfort

  • @davidhotchkiss8922
    @davidhotchkiss8922 2 роки тому +2

    It's soooo sad and heart dropping to hear these people talk of the fire hazards Colorado faces. Hearing them say talk about the fears they have, and to watch this, again, now in 2022, knowing those fears have, were and still will be again, is heart breaking.

  • @Hannahcode1
    @Hannahcode1 6 років тому +3

    Where are we to build and live other than take up all our farm land? I won't be herded into cities where they seem to want us. Excellent video.

    • @babybrat2958
      @babybrat2958 5 років тому

      What evidence do you have that they are herding people into cities? The most affordable housing is in the country. It costs a lot more to live in a big city.

    • @zuzufitz
      @zuzufitz 5 років тому +2

      Perhaps people should stop breeding like rabbits (regardless of what their religions encourage).

  • @ThePaulobraveheart
    @ThePaulobraveheart 3 роки тому

    very sad, here in portugal we have the same problem.
    not so long ago, more than 60 people died, fleeing the fire.

  • @hunter-ho1ku
    @hunter-ho1ku Рік тому

    to think that back then.. waldo, hayman, black tiger, black forest, and sunshine were some of the worst we'd seen... and just in 2020, three different fires smashed those records repeatedly. east troublesome, spring creek, and cameron peak were horrific to watch, ash was raining all the way in lafayette.. and then the marshall fire, the OTHER spring creek fire, the cal wood fire.. god it's been heartbreaking to see places from my childhood and these forests and mountains i love go up in smoke so quickly. even my own home went down in the marshall fires. i dearly hope we can do more controlled burns and heal our forests again, we can't keep breaking these records, breaking hearts and shattering lives along the way. i hope the post will go over how terrifying 2020 and 2021 was for the fire season here.. we need to do better to protect our lands and our people, without creating the same problem of overcrowded forests again.

  • @jimmyhostetter6024
    @jimmyhostetter6024 4 роки тому

    Frontline Did a greatjob of explaing the complexity of Urban-interface fires...in Florida we control urban 2 million acres a year average,its a great forest managt tool.

  • @JessieArmy
    @JessieArmy 4 роки тому +1

    The Waldo Canyon fire completely destroyed my neighborhood.

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 4 роки тому +8

    If you build a house in of a forest, don't be surprised when nature does her normal housecleaning every decade or so and sees it as just another pile of dead wood to be mucked out.

    • @josephastier7421
      @josephastier7421 4 роки тому +1

      @@Sagethis Trees don't grow fast enough to have a forest fire in the same place every year.

    • @Kairos_Akuma
      @Kairos_Akuma 3 роки тому

      @@josephastier7421 Exactly.

  • @adventuretonothingness7554
    @adventuretonothingness7554 3 роки тому +2

    never forget the granite mountain hotshots

  • @jamestroy9625
    @jamestroy9625 2 роки тому

    I do understand understand everything this man says about risking lives, you didn’t send your nephew up , he did when he inlisted in fire fighting, we all risk our lives when we go into a burning home, our law enforcement, military etc etc. I have seen my father going into full I golfed home and bring out two survivors and one casualtiy. When we say I will, that is each individual choice and risk. My heart and prayers go out to all who risk their lives for others.

  • @samji7854
    @samji7854 3 роки тому

    Thank you Jesus

  • @Shoz_
    @Shoz_ 2 роки тому

    My respect to the firefighters and people working for safety

  • @jonahperry6103
    @jonahperry6103 2 роки тому

    Knew it was going to be good when I heard the intro song!!

  • @michaelhigley7142
    @michaelhigley7142 2 роки тому +1

    i was near the Yarnell hill fire and knew one of the members of the 19 hotshots and still to this day it hurts when hearing about it😢
    R.I.P GRANITE MOUNTAIN HOTSHOTS

  • @ogdocvato
    @ogdocvato 5 років тому

    The thing I detest the most about our universe is that all good things end far too soon.

  • @briankistner4331
    @briankistner4331 3 роки тому +1

    It's getting worse. Top 3 fires in Colorado history all happened in 2020.

  • @johnelder3978
    @johnelder3978 3 роки тому

    What the guy said at 14 min makes total sence and everyones insurance rate shouldnt go up because you wanna build a home in a dry forrest ready to burn or in tornado alley or in a flood zone.

  • @RealCadde
    @RealCadde 5 років тому +6

    It's really quite simple. First you start off with a completely different approach to "private property".
    Allow campers to camp anywhere they want at most one day in the same location for FREE.
    Then allow said campers to build a fire pit and collect dead wood from the forest floor.
    Encourage people to go out camping when it's not quite fire season yet and tell them they can and SHOULD burn as much dead wood as they possibly can. Have your fireplace going all night PLEASE.
    This way you remove A LOT of fuel from forests already. Which will save the landowner A LOT of money if a fire would have started, his trees will still be standing because there's no fuel to make it a crown fire. Only if the fire starts out in a crown will he lose trees.
    And of course, people get out more.
    Secondly, stop fighting forest fires. Really!
    As the indians say, work WITH them. Let them burn the forest floor all day long so they deplete all the fuel on the ground.
    Then SEGMENT your land/forests so that a crown fire should it happen simply cannot jump the gaps.
    If a segment burns then LET IT BURN. Stop it from spreading to other segments CROWNS but LET the forest floor BURN.
    Finally, around houses/farms/villages/towns/cities, make a protective circle. A border where unless you dropped NAPALM, no amount of fire would be able to cross over that border. Maintain any forest etc inside the circle so it never could burn. And everything outside said circles that isn't valuable MUST be allowed to burn and burn freely. Observe, fight the threats but DO NOT stop the fires.
    Actually, we need to start more controlled burns. Especially in forests and brushlands.

    • @stephanielloyd4053
      @stephanielloyd4053 Рік тому

      I still can't understand as a British person why your insist on building and cladding your homes and buildings with WOOD!

  • @surfergirlmaui9069
    @surfergirlmaui9069 4 роки тому +1

    Stop building!!!!!! You selfish people are just greedy and irresponsible!!!! This should not be allowed any longer!!!!!!!!!!!! We need to preserve nature!!!!!!!!!!!!! Our forests have been destroyed by the stupidity of humans!!!!!!!!!!!!! Our wildlife has been at risk!!!!!! This is outrageous!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @williamsantatikul9778
    @williamsantatikul9778 3 роки тому

    Dam dude I'll never forget the Black Forest fire in 2103 19:54

  • @DavidElzeitsinfill
    @DavidElzeitsinfill Рік тому +1

    The wild fires are made much larger and out of control because everything is so dry. There isn't enough moisture in the soil, there isn't enough moisture in the vegetation. One thing we need to do is move water from the ocean back inland to places we need it. The natural water cycle can't refill aquifers that were filled thousands of years ago by melting glaciers after the last ice age. Big problems need big solutions.
    The biggest idea I am trying to express is tunneling aqueducts from the coast, in this case the west coast of the USA inland to feed combination geothermal power and sea water desalination plants. The idea seems to be so big that no one has considered it possible but I believe it is not only possible but it is necessary. For over a century the fossil water contained in aquifers has been pumped out to feed agriculture, industry and municipal water needs. The natural water cycle cant refill fossil water deposits that were filled 10,000 years ago when the glaciers melted after the last ice age. Without refilling these aquifers there is not much of a future for the region of the United states. As a result ground levels in some areas of the San Joaquin Valley have subsided by more than 30 feet. Similar fossil water depletion is happening in other regions all around the world. TBM and tunneling technology has matured and further developments in the industry are poised to speed up the tunneling process and it's these tunnels that are the only way to move large volumes of water from the ocean inland. The water is moved inland to areas where it can be desalinated in geothermal plants producing clean water and power. In many cases the water will recharge surface reservoirs where it will be used first to make more hydro power before being released into rivers and canal systems. It's very important however to not stop tunneling at these first stops but to continue several legs until the water has traveled from the ocean under mountain ranges to interior states. Along the way water will flow down grade through tunnels and rise in geothermal loops to fill mountain top pumped hydro batteries several times before eventually recharging several major aquifers. What I am proposing is essentially reversing the flow of the Colorado River Compact. Bringing water from the coast of California first to mountaintop reservoirs then to the deserts of Nevada and Arizona and on to Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming. This big idea looks past any individual city or states problems and looks at the whole and by using first principles identifies the actual problem and only solution.
    Thank you for your time, I would like the opportunity to explain in further detail and answer any questions.
    A better future is possible,

  • @WallyTony
    @WallyTony 6 років тому +4

    Colorado is so screwed in the future.

    • @patrickzink2191
      @patrickzink2191 5 років тому +3

      Any state that allows homes in fire prone areas in just waiting for the day that it happens

  • @rabidseabee7229
    @rabidseabee7229 6 років тому +5

    The only way to work around wild fires is like that one dude with the roccrete dome house lol

    • @lorumipsum1129
      @lorumipsum1129 5 років тому

      Pretty much, a brick house would work too. But California doesn’t have any with the exception of really old houses

    • @mpj-nc6wq
      @mpj-nc6wq 4 роки тому

      Xinless Vice a brick house would fall over in the heat

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 4 роки тому +6

    Too many people now, and they all want to live in the same places.

  • @annanorthup8542
    @annanorthup8542 7 років тому

    Can you please tell me the name and artist of the opening song?

    • @jimg2741
      @jimg2741 6 років тому +1

      Young men dead - The Black Angels

    • @colemarie9262
      @colemarie9262 4 роки тому

      They're ^^^ really good too, check out other songs.

  • @andrewhatcher3195
    @andrewhatcher3195 4 роки тому +1

    This is pretty simple. Maintain a particular degree of landscape to begin with and when a fire happens it stops by itself. Simple mechanics. Instead our country is so based on greed money comes first. I honestly could have preventative measures in place so well that hotshots are not needed, and air tankers are not needed either. It is pretty simple. No one wants to do it even though it is cost effective. This country is so based on greed they would rather let people die then fix the methods they use that DO NOT WORK.

  • @mediocrehat
    @mediocrehat 4 роки тому +2

    I’m fine with people saying that those of us who live in the mountains don’t deserve fire protection, but stop taxing me for it then. Stop asking for thousands of dollars every year for a service you won’t provide and stop asking for absurd sums in permits and the like that go to county services you won’t provide. I’m on board with saying that if the risk is too great, structures will be left without protection, including my own. It’s not fair though, to treat us as tax farms. If we’re on our own, we should truly be on our own, not paying for other people. I’ll use the money to protect my own home, and/or hire private fire protection services if needed. That’s fine. Of course, when the fire rolls into the cities and towns (as happened in Santa Rosa, and San Diego, and Colorado Springs, and Oakland, and Paradise, and Gatlinburg, and a bunch of other places) and burns hundreds or thousands of homes, I expect the city folks to be on their own too, and not get a dime of my taxes for rebuilding. Fair is fair.

  • @straybubbles7334
    @straybubbles7334 4 роки тому +1

    2020 be watching this laughing and smoking a cigar

  • @lesliepfeifer8518
    @lesliepfeifer8518 6 років тому +1

    Yarnell....I remember the exact moment I heard that horrible, horrible news...

    • @ARTISTCHD1
      @ARTISTCHD1 6 років тому

      ALL-ALPHA-AMERICAS: Are areas designated in a divinely decreed deliberation, designed for everybody’s existing each Ethnicity, to come together as only ONE ORIGINAL ORGANISM of OFFICIAL ORGANIZATION.

    • @luke8210
      @luke8210 6 років тому +2

      We lost 19 good men in yarnell. Every time I think of it it makes me want to cry. To make matters worse the city of Prescott gave thanks to the family's by giving each family a whopping 25k check. The value the city puts on each man was 25k.....wonder if the city council members value their own lives at the same amount......I hope when they retire that they're offered the same amount in lieu of a retirement fund.

  • @DanahV
    @DanahV 5 років тому

    Do they plant trees again after a fire? Just to replace the burnt ones. #Curiosity

    • @tomalapevides
      @tomalapevides 5 років тому

      Some trees actually thrive on it, like the eucalyptus - fire makes it release seeds so lots of new little ones pop up. They grow real quick and further exacerbate the problem as they burn like fuel

    • @apextroll
      @apextroll 5 років тому

      Intervention is not the answer. This is the underlying premise of this video..Nature has a plan. Fire is part of it.

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому

      @@tomalapevides maybe there are cyrpess trees that pop up after wild fire so do other plants like manzanita in Arizona. anyways

    • @paulsmallriver6066
      @paulsmallriver6066 5 років тому

      #Princess D yes, on federal and state land and also on private timber property. Good question. Often burned trees are logged. The smaller ones are ground into chips and the large ones are milled for lumber. When the trees are removed it allows sunlight onto the forest floor and grasses and shrubs begin to grow. The cycle begins anew.

    • @Thechezbailey
      @Thechezbailey 3 роки тому

      The pine tree has cones that only open when they feel the heat of a fire. They release into the rich ash and 20 years later the forest is back.

  • @ethandunlop7395
    @ethandunlop7395 6 років тому

    Was that the springs fire

    • @ARTISTCHD1
      @ARTISTCHD1 6 років тому

      Furthermore, those who wantonly wish to angrily argue, dispute - disagree and debate these thoughtful decisions, we have let them go to the waysides and washed away and withered wayward. Facing flash floods and ferocious flaming forests fires. Nobody in their right minds are going to come and rescue them; inclusively, firefighters. They’re on their own, based upon what decisions and choices themselves made, thus to stay or leave. Voluntarily vacate - evacuate. No more meaningless mandatory; “forced evacuations”!!!

  • @Hypercube9
    @Hypercube9 5 років тому

    They need to start building rows of concrete townhouses between the wood homes and the forests in California. This would help meet the needs of all the homeless they have, and act as a firebreak in between valleys! If you surround enough homes with 3 story concrete buildings that the fire can't jump over, it reduces the area the firemen have to cover!
    Either that or people in these states should start building emergency shelters underground again.

    • @aflong62
      @aflong62 2 роки тому

      I understand what you're saying, but we have to keep in mind that embers can jump anything. If a fire can jump over a 6-lane highway, even 3-story concrete buildings won't be able to protect much.

  • @aliakba6269
    @aliakba6269 4 роки тому +3

    I dont blame you hell if im dying for the city.

  • @DrGoldenFlap
    @DrGoldenFlap 2 роки тому +1

    Thumbs down for no CC support. Do better

  • @irismortimer1
    @irismortimer1 5 років тому

    this is terrible and so sad !prayers for them all !!

  • @shadowbanned69
    @shadowbanned69 4 роки тому +1

    Why oh why do people keep building their homes in wildfire prone areas...ya gotta have a fire break anywhere around your home...

  • @crand20033
    @crand20033 6 років тому

    We do not have this problem in NC. It's very wet here. But it's hot.

  • @michaelpcooksey5096
    @michaelpcooksey5096 Рік тому

    Yup, soldiers say I will die for my country and go to war situations. Police say only when necessary, Fire say only when caught in an unexpected situation. They are ALL front line people, but with different jobs and commitments. No problem. I'm grateful for all of them every time they do what the good Lord wants them to do. What I'd like to see is a home design that will withstand a 3-4000 degree F fire in 70 - 100 mph wind for 4 hours. Its a challenge!! There has to be a way. Anyone tried to experiment using Cob for the walls and having 2 layers of outside walls with air inbetween them? And then there is the roof ... Passive solar earth roof? We know animals can survive these high temperatures underground and they only have to go inches down to be safe. There has to be a way ... and then making it cheap enough for the public.

  • @mikemaby5497
    @mikemaby5497 5 років тому +1

    why don't all houses have sprinkler systems around the perimeter of each house, and the american govmt say sod off, to the water bills.

    • @colemarie9262
      @colemarie9262 4 роки тому +1

      During a fire like that, water spray is going to stop it. It is so hot that structures like homes just explode...and all that water will steam off before the fire even gets close because of the INTENSE heat.
      If you've ever had a bonfire on a cold night you'll know that the heat is incredible even from a small thing like that, and this is thousands of times the size and heat.

  • @franksanfilippo492
    @franksanfilippo492 4 роки тому

    Wow that's so incredibly sad to see

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 2 роки тому

    I feel really bad for the trees burned up and the wildlife killed. The houses

  • @48grainsoffreedom
    @48grainsoffreedom Рік тому

    This video has 6 years now. And yet nobody learned from it...

  • @persephone2706
    @persephone2706 3 роки тому

    That photo her husband took was incredible and terrible.

  • @rendorwilliams9116
    @rendorwilliams9116 4 роки тому +1

    You should burn outwards from locations you want to protect. Allow your small weak backfire to move towards the large main fire, and they will merge at 20 feet plus, away from the target home or building.

  • @dietmarbitterlich3500
    @dietmarbitterlich3500 4 роки тому

    That's what happen when you allow building wood homes, stone and concrete should be the codes.

  • @humanbeingscanb2evil
    @humanbeingscanb2evil 5 років тому +3

    At least these guys were honest,the fire suppression of the last hundred yrs has lead to build up of undergrowth and ppl moving into areas once not inhabited,most of these news channel covered stories have the firemen saying it’s due to climate change or global warming.
    I live in the hills above my town cause the views are awesome but if we ever have a fire I hope the firemen don’t put their lives on the line for my belongings,belongings( except for photos) can be replaced a firemen’s live can’t
    We also live in an area of a lot of earthquakes and I also know about landslides and they are all risks we take for views. On the flats of my town we have floods due to the whakatane River,so sometimes it doesn’t matter where you live it’s like luck of the draw. But me should know the risk and if we are still willing to live their then that’s our responsibility and not the firemen’s ,I watched a documentary about firemen who speaks all summer away from home fighting wild fires and they are only paid like $10 an hr,that really is shit money for the risk to their lives and the amount of time spent away from home ,likely they love their job and ain’t do it for the $$$$$.
    So thank you dear firemen but please know I would rather my house burnt down then any of you get injured in anyway.
    Love from New Zealand

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 5 років тому +1

      most of the fires aren't caused by global warming /climate change however that will make them worse. I live in Arizona bad forest fire fighting and corporate /personal greed have caused some rather large fires, most recently aroudn hwere I live the Cave Creek complex fire. I have been to Yarnell. I have seen the place they died. they didnt belong there.

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 5 років тому

    It's supposed to be an "urban interface", not "urban all over the place".

  • @catbriggs8362
    @catbriggs8362 2 роки тому

    I'd rather work for the Fire Chief that told his men to get out of there. Not the "stay and play" guy. Why sacrifice firefighters' lives in the face of an insurmountable disaster? Human nature resists admitting that something is just too big for our resources. We like to feel in control. But there's no controlling a firestorm of this magnitude. Save your guys to fight another day.

  • @f.dt.f3965
    @f.dt.f3965 4 роки тому

    its not the fire suppression so much it is the mismanagement of the forest in between ....all natural = fire trap ..clean it up undergrowth and downed trees dead standing trees...thin em and remove the brush or at least thin it