A forest fire crew is a unit of volunteers who are called upon by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Bureau of Forestry to assist in the battle against wildfire. A crew is equipped with a number of tools to aid them in this work. These tools include the Sanvik brush knife, brush hook, pulaski, fire rake, shovel, fire broom, chain saw, drip torch, and backpack tank. The standard method of fighting wildfire is to remove all unburned fuel between you and the fire. This is done by constructing a control line around the fire. This control line may be made in a number of ways. It can be accomplished through water / retardant drops from air tankers and helicopters, wetting down the fuels by applying water or foam from tanker / pump units, use of heavy equipment to rapidly carve a wide swath through the forest, but the most used method is the forest fire crew often called the ground pounder. The other methods of constructing a control line are limited by factors such as terrain, forest density, weather, and in the case of aircraft, even the time of year. The forest fire crew, though slowed in progress, is not limited by these factors.
The forest fire crew constructs a control line, by hand, making a barrier around the fire to check its growth. Construction of a control line should always begin on a safe anchor point such as a road, power line, lake, stream, or rock slide or any other natural or man made structure which provides a hard stop against fire. The crew is led by the Trail Blazer who clears the initial path for the control line. He uses a Sanvik brush knife or brush hook to clear small underbrush and low hanging tree branches. He is followed by a team of rakemen who use fire rakes to remove the surface fuels down to mineral soil. There are normally 10 or more rakemen on a crew. The most common method used by the rakemen is the One Lick. In this method each rakeman takes one lick with his rake and then moves on. Each rakeman behind him does the same making the line deeper and wider as they go. They are followed by a sweeper who uses a fire broom to remove any excess leaves, twigs, and other small fuels from the line and from around trees near the line. Following this, the torch man "burns out" the fuels which lie between the control line and the fire. He is followed by one or more crewmen with backpack tanks who are charged with controlling the burn-out. In this way, a control line can be constructed in nearly any place at any time.
In addition to fire fighting duties, the forest fire crew also takes part
in forest fire prevention activities making them a part of the CFFP - Cooperative
Forest Fire Prevention program instituted by the US Department of Agriculture - Forest Service. These activities range from educational programs on living
in the Wildland Urban Interface to Smokey Bear presentations and parade appearances.
The World Wide Web in now the latest tool to be used to spread the fire prevention
word.