General discussion for aviators





Fire Spotting.

Anyone here familiar with Aerial Firefighting?

I’ve found fires to be an ever-present fact of life flying here in
California.  I’ve personally spotted at least two young, fast-moving
brush fires, one of which was during on my solo long cross country.
My instinct when I see these fires is always to tell someone,
especially if the fire appears particularly young (small).  Is this
correct?  I want to help, but I fear ‘bugging people’ about it.

The situation in particular which got me thinking, I took off from
Columbia and headed out for an overflight of Yosemite.  As we flew up
the valley, we noticed a tiny but quickly growing brush fire about 20
miles East of half dome, way up in the park.

I could not reach either Center or Fresno Approach, so I decided to
jump back on Columbia’s (A firefighting base) CTAF and call out for
any Firefighting aircraft.  I got one of the bomber pilots on
frequency, relayed the fire position, and he said they hadn’t heard of
that one and they were on their way to check it out.

It felt good to help… or he was being nice, I’m not sure.

So my question is, as a private pilot, should I feel a ‘duty’ to call
in forest fires?  Is it actually helpful?  If so,  what are/is the
best frequencies and procedures to use?

Any insight would be appreciated.

-Scott

posted by admin in Uncategorized and have Comments (7)






7 Responses to “Fire Spotting.”

  1. admin says:

    "EridanMan" <scott.cr…@gmail.com> wrote in message

    news:1193698905.435714.204010@57g2000hsv.googlegroups.com…

    > So my question is, as a private pilot, should I feel a ‘duty’ to call
    > in forest fires?  Is it actually helpful?

    During my commercial checkride in June, the examiner had me divert during a
    maneuver to go check out smoke coming from a stand of forest.  Turned out it
    was a controlled burn and there was equipment on the scene, so we went back
    about our business.   He specifically indicated, however, that checking out
    a fire is the right thing to do if you see one.

    (It’s also a boost to general aviation’s reputation of you’re the first to
    spot a fire and the media finds out.)

    -c

  2. admin says:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    EridanMan wrote:
    > Anyone here familiar with Aerial Firefighting?

    > I’ve found fires to be an ever-present fact of life flying here in
    > California.  I’ve personally spotted at least two young, fast-moving
    > brush fires, one of which was during on my solo long cross country.
    > My instinct when I see these fires is always to tell someone,
    > especially if the fire appears particularly young (small).  Is this
    > correct?  I want to help, but I fear ‘bugging people’ about it.

    > The situation in particular which got me thinking, I took off from
    > Columbia and headed out for an overflight of Yosemite.  As we flew up
    > the valley, we noticed a tiny but quickly growing brush fire about 20
    > miles East of half dome, way up in the park.

    > I could not reach either Center or Fresno Approach, so I decided to
    > jump back on Columbia’s (A firefighting base) CTAF and call out for
    > any Firefighting aircraft.  I got one of the bomber pilots on
    > frequency, relayed the fire position, and he said they hadn’t heard of
    > that one and they were on their way to check it out.

    > It felt good to help… or he was being nice, I’m not sure.

    > So my question is, as a private pilot, should I feel a ‘duty’ to call
    > in forest fires?  Is it actually helpful?  If so,  what are/is the
    > best frequencies and procedures to use?

    My instructor is also a TRACON controller.
    His advice is to divert and look for equipment
    on-scene and if there’s nothing, call it in
    to Approach.

    You did the right thing.  An early heads-up
    can save lots of money and trees.

  3. admin says:

    We take a lot of calls every fire season in the Tower regarding fires.
    Giving us a radial/DME from any VOR is best.  Use GPS to get that info
    if you have to.  Precise accuracy is not necessary, plus or minus five
    miles is fine.  We pass the info on to the local fire dispatch center
    and they take it from there.

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    EridanMan wrote:
    > Anyone here familiar with Aerial Firefighting?

    > I’ve found fires to be an ever-present fact of life flying here in
    > California.  I’ve personally spotted at least two young, fast-moving
    > brush fires, one of which was during on my solo long cross country.
    > My instinct when I see these fires is always to tell someone,
    > especially if the fire appears particularly young (small).  Is this
    > correct?  I want to help, but I fear ‘bugging people’ about it.

    > The situation in particular which got me thinking, I took off from
    > Columbia and headed out for an overflight of Yosemite.  As we flew up
    > the valley, we noticed a tiny but quickly growing brush fire about 20
    > miles East of half dome, way up in the park.

    > I could not reach either Center or Fresno Approach, so I decided to
    > jump back on Columbia’s (A firefighting base) CTAF and call out for
    > any Firefighting aircraft.  I got one of the bomber pilots on
    > frequency, relayed the fire position, and he said they hadn’t heard of
    > that one and they were on their way to check it out.

    > It felt good to help… or he was being nice, I’m not sure.

    > So my question is, as a private pilot, should I feel a ‘duty’ to call
    > in forest fires?  Is it actually helpful?  If so,  what are/is the
    > best frequencies and procedures to use?

    > Any insight would be appreciated.

    > -Scott

  4. admin says:

    EridanMan wrote:

    > Any insight would be appreciated.

    > -Scott

    When I was on my solo long xc, I noticed a commercial vehicle fire on a
    rural stretch of freeway that had erupted while i was flying that way
    (smoke plume just bloomed in front of me).

    I called it in on CTAF to the county airport 5 miles away and orbited
    until equipment was on scene. Fuel wise I had topped off at that same
    county airport, so I had plenty of time to be a good sam.

    Of course, in addition to being a wing nut, I’d been a firefighter for
    10 years with the volunteers, so I tend to check lots of smoke plumes
    out along my path.

    Dave

  5. admin says:

    EridanMan <scott.cr…@gmail.com> wrote in
    news:1193698905.435714.204010@57g2000hsv.googlegroups.com:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    > Anyone here familiar with Aerial Firefighting?

    > I’ve found fires to be an ever-present fact of life flying here in
    > California.  I’ve personally spotted at least two young, fast-moving
    > brush fires, one of which was during on my solo long cross country.
    > My instinct when I see these fires is always to tell someone,
    > especially if the fire appears particularly young (small).  Is this
    > correct?  I want to help, but I fear ‘bugging people’ about it.

    > The situation in particular which got me thinking, I took off from
    > Columbia and headed out for an overflight of Yosemite.  As we flew up
    > the valley, we noticed a tiny but quickly growing brush fire about 20
    > miles East of half dome, way up in the park.

    > I could not reach either Center or Fresno Approach, so I decided to
    > jump back on Columbia’s (A firefighting base) CTAF and call out for
    > any Firefighting aircraft.  I got one of the bomber pilots on
    > frequency, relayed the fire position, and he said they hadn’t heard of
    > that one and they were on their way to check it out.

    > It felt good to help… or he was being nice, I’m not sure.

    > So my question is, as a private pilot, should I feel a ‘duty’ to call
    > in forest fires?  Is it actually helpful?  If so,  what are/is the
    > best frequencies and procedures to use?

    > Any insight would be appreciated.

    > -Scott

            I can only relate my experience with this.

            Several years ago I was heading on V137 between ROM and AVE down to
    DAG for an Angel Flight pick up to STS.  It was a nice clear VFR day and I
    was relaxing enjoying the flight when I noticed a burst of orange on the
    ground in front of me.  What looked like a large propane tank had exploded
    and started a fire.  

            The fire was almost directly on V137 and I estimated about 10 miles in
    front of me.  As I already had flight following, I called ATC and asked
    them to contact the CDF.  I also said I would ident when over the fire for
    a more precise fix.  The response was a "thank you" and they called the
    CDF.

            While on the ground at DAG, I called FSS to check the my return route,
    and at that time there was no TFR established.  

            About 3 hours after I had reported the fire, I was heading back from
    DAG to STS and from AVE was following V107.  At AVE, I could see the smoke
    coming from the fire.  I had to climb up to 10,500′ to stay VFR.  As I was
    nearing the smoke, ATC announced the TFR.  Then, to my surprise, Center
    cleared me into the edge of the TFR, thanking me for reporting the fire.

            In my case, the choice of frequency to use was easy, as I just used
    the one I was receiving flight following on.  Had I not been with flight
    following, I would have used whatever center/approach/FSS frequency was
    appropriate for my location to report what I had observed.

            Reporting a fire one sees start is the right thing to do.  I consider
    it a civic duty, whether I’m flying an airplane, driving by in a car, or
    see it out my window.  The sooner fires are reported, the sooner the
    appropriate agency can respond and fight it.  


    Marty Shapiro
    Silicon Rallye Inc.

    (remove SPAMNOT to email me)

  6. admin says:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    EridanMan wrote:
    > Anyone here familiar with Aerial Firefighting?

    > I’ve found fires to be an ever-present fact of life flying here in
    > California.  I’ve personally spotted at least two young, fast-moving
    > brush fires, one of which was during on my solo long cross country.
    > My instinct when I see these fires is always to tell someone,
    > especially if the fire appears particularly young (small).  Is this
    > correct?  I want to help, but I fear ‘bugging people’ about it.

    > The situation in particular which got me thinking, I took off from
    > Columbia and headed out for an overflight of Yosemite.  As we flew up
    > the valley, we noticed a tiny but quickly growing brush fire about 20
    > miles East of half dome, way up in the park.

    > I could not reach either Center or Fresno Approach, so I decided to
    > jump back on Columbia’s (A firefighting base) CTAF and call out for
    > any Firefighting aircraft.  I got one of the bomber pilots on
    > frequency, relayed the fire position, and he said they hadn’t heard of
    > that one and they were on their way to check it out.

    > It felt good to help… or he was being nice, I’m not sure.

    > So my question is, as a private pilot, should I feel a ‘duty’ to call
    > in forest fires?  Is it actually helpful?  If so,  what are/is the
    > best frequencies and procedures to use?

    > Any insight would be appreciated.

    > -Scott

    Oklahoma does a lot of control burning. Once I was flying and heard a
    pilot call in a fire. ATC acknowledged it. I came on and told about the
    control burning and ATC said that if they are informed of a fire they
    had the duty to report it. As I looked out from my vantage point, I
    could count about 8 fires going on.

    Regards, Ross
    C-172F 180HP
    KSWI

  7. admin says:

    Newps wrote:
    >We take a lot of calls every fire season in the Tower regarding fires.
    >Giving us a radial/DME from any VOR is best.  Use GPS to get that info
    >if you have to.  Precise accuracy is not necessary, plus or minus five
    >miles is fine.  We pass the info on to the local fire dispatch center
    >and they take it from there.

      I report fires every year during backcountry flying season.  Generally, I
    call up whichever Center has control of the local airspace.   When giving
    reports to ATC, Newps is spot on.  Radial and distance is the preferred
    method.   When I first got a GPS, I thought they would appreciate the
    increased accuracy, but after giving the lat/long coordinates, I was always
    asked for a radial and distance :-)  Of course, when your talking about a
    column of smoke pouring out of a forest, pinpoint accuracy isn’t really much
    of a benefit.

    John Galban=====>N4BQ (PA28-180)


    Message posted via AviationKB.com
    http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/aviation/200710/1







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