Monday, 21 November 2011

Observations on the trip

The other day I was at work and we were doing a drill at the Training tower in our department.  Afterwards we were doing the typical stand in a circle and talk about what happened.  I was standing next to one of our younger members and mentioned a fatality fire that occured in Massachusets sometime in the early 2000's.  His offhand comment to me was "I was in the 8th grade then" caught me up...  I was probably between 48 and 50 years old.  Here was a young man who didn't have a clue what I was talking about because he was only 12 or 13 years old at the time.  Talk about your reality checks!

This is what it looks like out the window as life speeds by... you don't feel that you have changed that much.  Maybe you are a bit wiser and certainly have more experience but for the most part you are the same person year in and year out.  Then a sign post pops into view that says "Senior menu available to those over 55".  Wow.  Someone else gets to define me as a 'senior'. 

Now I am going on aid calls to people my age and younger who are experiencing serious medical issues.  I found out a friend of mine 2 years younger had a stent implanted in his heart to open a blocked artery!  WOUCH!!

It is interesting to look out the window.

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Young Men and Fire by Norman Maclean

Perhaps you saw the movie, or if you are a reader, you read the book:  A River Runs Through It.  The author of that work also wrote an account of a forest fire that took the lives of 13 young men on August 5, 1949 at a place called Mann Gulch.  The book is called: Young Men and Fire.  I just finished reading it.

Earlier in October I was taking a class for my job in the fire service.   NIMS 300 was the class.  For the uninitiated it stands for National Incident Management System and it was the 300 series of the class.  The instructor spoke of this book during the class, in the morning session.  I happened to have my lunch with me that day and so did not anticipate going out to eat.  I also happened to have my Kindle along as well and so at the break I bought the book and started reading!

Now, I am a structural firefighter.  I know about wildland firefighting but only from books and textbooks.  This was a fascinating account of the Mann Gulch fire that killed 13 young men in a matter of minutes.  He carefully, almost reverently, takes apart this fire, the attitudes, the policies and the politics and lays them bare for all to see.  It is an intriguing account written in the style you would recognize if you had read A River...  This fire and the resulting deaths sent shock waves through the country and the Forest Service as well.  The picture of these men, some as young as 19, one of them a veteran of Bastongne, fleeing before a 'blowup', a fire phenomenon not well recognized is poignant and touching, almost as if he were showing these young men what had happened to them.  In doing this he also brings to us an encounter with our mortality.  I really enjoyed it and recommend it to you, my reader.