Back to StoriesFeeling Through Fire: Part 1 - Mixed Emotions
These mixed emotions also
make sense. A study
published in Science at the end of
2023 revealed that the number of houses burned in wildfires in the U.S. has
doubled over the past 30 years; 55,000 homes have burned since 2012. In
Lewiston, Idaho alone this July, a single fire burned 150 structures. Wildfire
smoke, which according to the National Park Service is the largest source of
particulate matter in Greater Yellowstone, continues to threaten human health,
especially for more vulnerable populations. And researchers are increasingly
trying to quantify the toll wildfires are taking on mental health.
August 27, 2024
Feeling Through Fire: Part 1 - Mixed EmotionsIn Part 1 of our series, wildland firefighters explore the emotional contradictions of fire and a job that demands more than just 16-hour days
A wildland firefighter is backdropped by smoke from the 2021 Woods Creek Fire outside White Sulphur Springs, Montana, August 2021. Photo courtesy Kate Tirrell
EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is part of a Mountain
Journal series exploring our emotional
relationship to wildfire through a collection of people who have varying
relationships with the element. Through presenting a mosaic of experiences, we hope
to explore the complexity of one of the most dominant forces on Earth. Part I
in this series explores fire through the eyes of wildland firefighters.
“It
is a wholesome and necessary thing for us to turn again to the earth and in the
contemplation of her beauties to know the sense of wonder and humility.” – Rachel Carson, writer, conservationist
by Bella Butler
On the first wildfire
assignment Kate Tirrell worked as a wildland firefighter, she watched flames
command the steep hillsides and deep draws near the town of Capitan in South Central New Mexico. The drama of this fire wasn’t in shooting columns of
orange the height of a four-story building, or human structures bursting into a
show of pure heat—all things she would witness later in her career. What Tirrell
recalls of this burn was the sheer magnitude of the fire as it devoured
ponderosas and pinyon pine. She harvested pine nuts from the forest floor as
she navigated the topography and listened to the high-pitched crackle of
burning manzanita shrubs. She was in awe.
“I have so much respect for
fire on the landscape,” said Tirrell, a 31-year-old who grew up on the East Coast
and wasn’t exposed to wildfire until she went to college. “Seeing the scale
with which it moves … [It’s] really beautiful to be able to witness something
that's just so primal.”
The fire outside Capitan,
called the Pine Lodge Fire, burned more than 15,000 acres in 2019, and Tirrell
has been involved with wildfire ever since, working on a Type 2 Initial Attack hand
crew in Utah, then on elite Type 1 hotshot teams in Helena, Montana, and now
Entiat, Washington. She is one of 11,393 wildland firefighters the U.S. Forest
Service reports employing as of July 2024, and therefore one of the few people
in the country who frequently witness the phenomenon in intimate proximity. The
sense of wonder that Tirrell found on that first fire has permeated her entire
career as a wildland firefighter, feeding her affinity for a job that can
otherwise be indescribably taxing. She gets lost in vivid vignettes: witnessing
a column of flame rising to the sky; feeling the release of energy as a burn
runs through a dense stand of timber; listening to a freight-train-like rumble
as fire scales a mountainside.
1 million burning embers: A column of fire burns above tree level in Montana. Kate Tirrell and her Helena Hotshot crew responded. Photo courtesy Kate Tirrell
For someone like me—a
Westerner for whom fire has become a constant yet has never faced a blaze head-on—the
awe is palpable. When we spoke on a smoke-laden August afternoon, the distance
between our phone lines incinerates and I’m standing there with her in a
torching stand of ponderosas. Yet Tirrell’s wonderment is tinged with guilt,
like the crisp black edge of burnt paper.
“Honestly, I really enjoy
watching fire burn, even at an enormous scale,” she said. “And this is kind of
a sensitive subject, because so many people have such a negative relationship
with it, right? It destroys homes and communities and infrastructure and all of
those things that are so heartbreaking.”
“I pick my nails and teeth with the same knife. My hair matts and knots on my neck, and when I finally shower after 16 days the water runs black.” – Instagram post, Kate Tirrell, wildland firefighter
Tirrell implies a question
of great magnitude: how do we find beauty in something that causes so much
harm? It’s one of the contradictions baked into the concept of wildfire, a
force of literal and symbolic destruction and regeneration, wonder and fear,
beauty and devastation. This complexity is challenging to make sense of in a
world defined by hard and fast binaries. But where logic falters, emotions can
serve us.
A few hundred miles from
where the Pine Lodge Fire burned in 2019, another rookie was starting his first
fire season in Jackson, Wyoming. Henry Sollitt grew up in Jackson and worked four seasons on the Bridger Teton
National Forest’s Engine 441 and was periodically loaned out to Utah’s Logan
Hotshots, including the entire 2021 season. Sollitt recently traded his hard hat for law school, but
years of being steeped in that same wonder Tirrell described has left him
stained with nostalgia.
“I was always so floored by
how dynamic it seemed to the point of being animate,” Sollitt said. “There were
just times where you talked about the fire in the third person. You were
assigning it agency, like, ‘Oh, the fire is going to get up and do this thing,’
as though it could, as if it had the power to do anything other than act in the
way that physics was applying it to.”
This makes sense. Fire is a
spectacle, one that our brains have programmed reactions to. While scientists
still seek explanations to the effect fire has on our brains, some
studies have explored its hypnotic allure and its ability to lowers our
blood pressure and our stress hormone cortisol. Still other
research has examined its evolutionary imprint on our brains. In other
words, the sense of awe Sollitt and Tirrell describe may be in part built into
us as much as our instinct to flinch when an ember lands on our skin.
But Sollitt expresses a
familiar hesitation when he recalls the wonder fire inspires in him.
“At every moment, I was
just floored by how beautiful everything was around me, even in the objective
chaos and destruction that I was witnessing,” he said. “We were working night
shifts, and every night, it was spectacularly beautiful to see this landscape
as it was burning, which is pretty terrible, I guess, to say, but there is this
insane beauty.”
Henry Sollitt is a former wildland firefighter from Jackson, Wyoming. He’s pictured here working on the Smokey Hollow Fire in Wyoming’s Caribou Targhee National Forest. Photo courtesy Henry Sollitt
Wildland firefighters
aren’t strangers to competing ideas. The job alone pits many truths against one
another.
“[The intensity of the
work] brings a lot of anticipation … for me,” Tirrel said. “Being away from
home, being away from all of my comforts and my hobbies and my habits, and just
kind of stripping my life down into just surviving and getting through fire
season.” In June, she posted to her Instagram account, appropriately called @lady.hotshot,
elaborating in an a poetic list of laments that if titled could be called “Just
One More Season.”
“At every moment, I was just floored by how beautiful everything was around me, even in the objective chaos and destruction that I was witnessing.” – Henry Sollitt, former wildland firefighter
“I pick my nails and teeth
with the same knife,” a section of the post reads. “My hair matts and knots on
my neck, and when I finally shower after 16 days the water runs black.” But the
rant turns on itself at the end into an eventual confession: “The truth is,
I’ve never been happier. In the filth and fatigue I feel at home. With the crew
and the folks who feel like family, I keep getting pulled to return.”
Sollitt echoed this,
emphasizing the romanticism that glosses over the feeling of “having to leave
in 48 hours to hike around a 100-degree hillside … Again.” But still, he too
confesses: “I think it’s the best job I’ll ever have.”
One of the challenges
loaded in the work, Sollitt explained, is the periodic reckoning with the
futility of it. And herein lies yet another contradiction: In the business of
managing wildfire, the fire has a way of getting the last word.
“I'm not going to say that
the work that we did out in the field didn't make a difference, because I
believe that the strategies and tactics that are employed in certain situations
absolutely do what the fire managers and people on the ground are planning them
to,” Sollitt said. “On occasion, we were able to draw the lines and establish
the boundaries of the fire and it would stay within those boundaries, which is
the whole point of suppression and management, and it was pretty remarkable to
be a part of. And it was always pretty remarkable to see that there were
instances where our ability to control the fire felt very, very distant and
futile.”
The Moose Fire burns the dramatic topography around Idaho’s Salmon River in 2022. Ignited by an unattended campfire, the Moose Fire was the largest wildfire in the country during the summer of 2022, burning 130,235 acres over the course of four and a half months. Photo by Kate Tirrell
Tirrell described this
tension like a tease, where “sometimes fire plays nice,” but that you can so
quickly be reminded of its potential to step outside a controllable space.
“I think that's what's so
humbling,” she said. “You can think of all the factors and preload your brain
with all of these different possibilities in the fire environment, and you can
get pretty good at predicting. But there's just this element of sometimes fire
just does what it wants to do.”
For these firefighters, awe
and respect converge into an emotion that threads through all the
contradictions: reverence. Reverence holds space for the emotional complexity
that burns within us, whether inspired by wildfire or any other mixed bag of
our time.
“I have a lot of emotions,
and in the past I’ve had a hard time allowing myself to experience all of
them,” Tirrell said. “I think through this job, and through interfacing with
the landscape and fire in all these ways, I've done a lot of growing. And in
that growing, it's like my container for experiencing emotions has gotten
bigger.”
The magnitude of the awe that
struck Tirrell years ago watching her first wildfire engulf a landscape is
mirrored within her.
“Fire is sacred,” she said
at the sunset of one of her rare days off before heading back into the field.
“And our relationship to it can be as well.”
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