Fire camp

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The base fire camp set up to fight the Taylor fire in Coconino National Forest in 2009.
The fire camp for the Hughey Fire near Medford in 1940

A fire camp is a

Wildland firefighters
. Fire camps may also provide minor maintenance and servicing of equipment.

While a fire camp is technically separate from the Incident Command Post and Incident Base it is common practice in U.S. wildland firefighting to set up the fire camp at the Incident Command post or Incident Base. Spike Camps are satellites of the main fire camp, and generally draw their supplies and food from the main camp while providing their own sanitation facilities. Spike Camps are used to support operation areas that require personnel to travel extended distances to return to the main camp. They are generally seen as a safety measure to prevent excessive fatigue, and reduce the probability of a collision with a civilian vehicle or stationary object.

See also

  • Mobilization and staging area
  • Drop Point
  • California fire camps
    , an example of fire camps staffed by incarcerated firefighters

References

Citations

  1. ^ Omi 2005, p. 307.

Sources

  • Omi, Philip (2005), Forest Fires: A Reference Handbook, ABC-CLIO,

Further reading