Am I wrong, seems like with the good helicopter coverage of this fire I saw instances where the fire advanced somewhat slowly and without fury. Not the entire fire at once, of course, but when passing through brush that was less dense. Seems almost as if real progress could have been made if the fire was hit at these spots during one of these moments of weakness. While these moments came and went, the air hardware might have been elsewhere, or the ground personnel were doing structure protection. Do firefighters ever have the opportunity to experiment with different fighting techniques on fires?
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Interesting point.You were watching the great feed from ABC7 telecopter who was hovering outside the TFR at around 10,000 feet with an amazing telephoto lens. It's a marvelous tool to get a God's eye view of the incident. I'm going to post the first hour or so of the fire in response to your question...because they do try to take advantage of those "moments of weakness" or create them by various means.
"Aug 16, 2016 Blue Cut Fire Time Line from Forum postings (Zero to 18,000 acres in 12 hours)
10:37 AM Report of Fire Location: I15 S No / Kenwood Ave (CHP Log)
FIRE JUST STARTING TO BLAZE - TRANS TO SB COMM CENTER
10:52 AM About 2 acres
10:49 AM PER 75-152 1/4 MILE AWAY FROM FWY AT THIS POINT, OUT W/CAL FIRE NOW
10:53 AM Full air response 2nd alarm
11:00 AM Shut down Old Cajon - from Cleghorn to Kenwood
11:01 AM 3 helicopters and 4 air tankers in route
11:04 AM Fire has potential to jump Old Cajon
11:05 AM Reduce air tanker request to 2
11:06 AM Fire is at 2 acres w/ fast rate of spread
11:13 AM 5 acres - heavy fuels
11:30 AM Per IC - Initiate evacuation of Swarthout Canyon - fire has spotted
11:31 AM IC - Close Swarthout between Cajon and Lone Pine - 7 air tankers on order
11:31 AM PER FIRE - REQUESTING IMMEDIATE CLOSURE OF CAJON BTW SWARTHOUT CANYON AND LONE PINE
11:37 AM FIRE JUMPED OVER TO SWARTHOUT/ HAVE CORDS SHUT DOWN CLEGHORN X CAJON
11:39 AM Immediate threat to structures in (lower) Swarthout area
11:41 AM Per IC - Shut down Lone Pine Caynon at Hwy 138
11:50 AM 3 additional type 1 helicopters - VLAT requested
11:51 AM BluecutFire 300 acres
11:51 AM IC requesting Hwy 138 shut down
11:56 Am IC order gel task force
12:00 PM Requesting full closure I15 north and south
12:02 PM Per IC : Evacuations requested for West Cajon Valley
12:08 PM mandatory evacs for West Cajon Valley Hwy 2 to I-15
12:18 PM Channel 9 reporting 1,000 acres
12:47 PM Hwy 138 closed from Hwy 2 to Summit Valley RD
12:49 PM evacuations ordered for Lytle Creek
01:07 PM estimated 1500 acres
01:30 PM VLAT 910 on scene and just made it's first retardant drop"
Lots of moving parts and their were all moving in different directions and all at once. The command post was alongside the old Cajon where the IC was looking at maps on the hood of his unit for the first couple hours, talking into his portable radio. The IC made some quick decisions that saved lives in the first minutes of this fire that grew to 12,000 acres in 12 hours. As the fire management gets a chance to get more resources in and a chance to fly the fire to see exactly what it is doing....what fuels it is burning through and will be going through in the immediate future, they will seek those moments of opportunity to go "DIRECT" against the fire when it is at it's weakest. It might be a ridge top they think they can hold or an area with lots of rocky ground where fire might not take hold as well. They can use hand crews....bull dozers....helicopters or aircraft or a combination there of. They will only do it after weighing the what ifs regarding firefighter and civilian safety. To your second question, yes there are Federal Experimental Centers and also civilian universities that experiment with better ways to put fire out. They have a facility here on the Angeles and one in Missoula, Mt. In Southern CA forests, the firefighters get plenty of practice year round.