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Episode 5: Burnout

Fireline

Release Date: 04/06/2021

Presenting: On The Green Fence show art Presenting: On The Green Fence

Fireline

This time on Fireline, we're bringing you an episode from our friends at On The Green Fence.  On The Green Fence is a podcast that explores complex and often divisive environmental topics where the best way forward isn't always clear. This episode focuses on the relationship between sustainability and tourism. Find more On The Green Fence wherever you get your podcasts.   

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Presenting: HumaNature show art Presenting: HumaNature

Fireline

From our friends at Wyoming Public Media, we present HumaNature, a show about where humans and habitat meet.  Today's episode, "Sanctuary," takes you back to 2012, 30 wolves and wolf-dogs were living at  in northern Colorado. But one sunny June morning, a massive wildfire closed in on their mountain home.

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Episode 6, Part 2: The Fire Triangle show art Episode 6, Part 2: The Fire Triangle

Fireline

Tens of millions of people across the West are facing the reality of life in a flammable landscape. When we hear about communities getting wiped out by wildfires, what’s actually going on? Why is it happening? And, what can we do about it? Jack Cohen is a retired U.S. Forest Service research physical scientist who focusing on the combustion and heat transfer of wildland fire Sheryl Gunn is a silviculturist with the Lolo National Forest Alex Metcalf is a social scientist focused on the broad field of human dimensions on natural resources and a professor at the University of Montana. ...

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Episode 6, Part 1: Moral Hazard show art Episode 6, Part 1: Moral Hazard

Fireline

The Wildland Urban Interface, or WUI, is where forest and homes meet. It’s the fastest growing land use type in the nation, and also where one in three homes across the country are situated. What’s it mean to live in the WUI, where the stakes of wildfire are higher than anywhere else? And why is this area so vulnerable to fire? Jen Henseik is the Missoula district ranger for the Lolo National Forest Rod Moraga is a firefighter and the CEO of Anchor Point, a wildland fire solutions group based in Boulder, Colorado Kimi Barrett leads Headwaters Economics’ research in wildfire and...

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Episode 5: Burnout show art Episode 5: Burnout

Fireline

There are more than 30,000 people who fight wildfires in the U.S, and about 400 firefighters have died on the job over the last two decades. As fire seasons get longer and longer and fires become more devastating, the physical and mental toll on firefighters themselves is also growing. Brent Ruby is a professor at the University of Montana and the director of the Montana Center for Work Physiology and Exercise Metabolism Dan Cottrell is the training foreman at the Missoula Smokejumper Base. Nelda St. Claire is a former National Critical Incident Stress Program Manager for the Bureau of...

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Episode 4: The Gift of Fire show art Episode 4: The Gift of Fire

Fireline

For millennia, wildfire was part of life in North America. Indigenous people used it for tradition and ceremony, to improve the health of ecosystems, and to assist with hunting and gathering. But the arrival of white settlers marked the beginning of an era in which that knowledge around fire and its role on the landscape was suppressed. Now, indigenous groups across the country are working to revive tribal relationships with fire. Today, one story of bringing fire back to the land on the Flathead Reservation in Northwest Montana.  - Andy Bidwell is a fuels specialist for the U.S. Forest...

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Episode 3: Ring of Fire show art Episode 3: Ring of Fire

Fireline

The connection between humans and fire goes back millions of years. What started with campfires and cooking grew into a burning addiction that catalyzed the Industrial Revolution and now shapes nearly every aspect of our society. Now, our ongoing reliance on fire in its many forms is changing the climate with explosive consequences for wildfires — and much more.   Richard Wrangham is emeritus professor at Harvard University and the author of Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human Jennifer Balch is a professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and the director of the Earth Lab...

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Episode 2: The Big Burn show art Episode 2: The Big Burn

Fireline

In 1910, a wildfire the size of Connecticut engulfed parts of Montana, Idaho and Washington. Ed Pulaski and his crew were among the many people trapped by the enormous blaze. The Big Burn, as it came to be known, helped propel a culture of fire suppression that persists in many forms  to this day. What does that massive fire mean for the way our society deals with the wildfires of today?  Jim See is the president of the Pulaski Project in Wallace, Idaho. Steve Pyne is a fire historian, and emeritus professor at Arizona State University.  Andrew Larson is a forest ecologist,...

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Episode 1: Suppressed show art Episode 1: Suppressed

Fireline

When Lily Clarke arrived at the August Complex Fire, it was a fire of sensational size. The blaze eventually burned more than 1 million acres, becoming the largest recorded wildfire in California history. Across the country in 2020, flames charred an area size nearly 5 times the size of Yellowstone National Park — the largest swathe of land burned since reliable records began. Wildfires across the country are getting bigger, hotter, and more devastating. But what's all this fire really mean — for the west, for firefighters, and for everyday folks? And what's it really like to fight fire...

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Fireline Preview show art Fireline Preview

Fireline

By just about every measure, wildfires are getting bigger, hotter, and more devastating than we’ve ever seen before. But what all that fire means — and what to do about it — depends on who you ask.

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There are more than 30,000 people who fight wildfires in the U.S, and about 400 firefighters have died on the job over the last two decades. As fire seasons get longer and longer and fires become more devastating, the physical and mental toll on firefighters themselves is also growing.

  • Brent Ruby is a professor at the University of Montana and the director of the Montana Center for Work Physiology and Exercise Metabolism

  • Dan Cottrell is the training foreman at the Missoula Smokejumper Base.

  • Nelda St. Claire is a former National Critical Incident Stress Program Manager for the Bureau of Land Management