BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 SATURDAY, JULY 24, 2021 Baker City man leading effort to stop nation’s biggest wildfire ■ Joe Hessel, a longtime Oregon Department of Forestry employee, is one of the incident commanders on the Bootleg fire, which has burned about 400,000 acres By Jayson Jacoby “We used to go out maybe only once in a summer. One of our teams was out fi ve times last year.” jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Joe Hessel remembers when the Dooley Mountain fi re, which burned 20,000 acres south of Baker City over several days, was a “gi- ant” blaze. Today he’s coordinating the effort to stem a fi re that burned more land than that every day. For almost two weeks Hessel straight. This yawn- ing difference between what was typical early in Hessel’s career, and what is common- place today, illustrates his longevity in a way perhaps more compelling than a couple of numbers can. Certainly Hessel, who lives in Baker City and is in his 38th summer amidst the smoke and the fl ames, can attest to the changes time has wrought when it comes to fi ghting wildland fi res in Oregon and across the West. The Dooley Mountain fi re, sparked by lightning in late July 1989, was at the time the biggest blaze in Baker County in several decades. It was also an abnormally large fi re by Oregon stan- dards. But today, the acreage charred that distant summer would occupy a scarcely no- ticeable corner of the fi re that has kept Hessel away from his Baker City home, and his La Grande offi ce, for almost two weeks. Hessel, 54, who is the Northeast District forester for the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF), is one of three incident commanders for the Bootleg fi re, a light- ning fi re burning in Klamath and Lake counties in south- central Oregon. At 400,000 acres as of Thursday, July 22, it’s the nation’s biggest blaze, the one responsible for much of the smoke that has clogged Baker Valley at times this month. — Joe Hessel, Oregon Department of Forestry fi re incident commander, and Baker City resident Bootleg Fire Camp/Contributed Photo The Bootleg fi re, burning in Klamath and Lake counties, is the biggest blaze in the nation. The one that has spawned smoke plumes which look, from the vantage point of space satellites, similar to a cataclysmic volcanic eruption. Hessel said his experi- ence on the Bootleg fi re has led him to ponder, as he sometimes has over the past 32 years, the days when he worked on the Dooley Moun- tain fi re as a fi refi ghter with the ODF. “That was one of the fi rst big fi res I was involved in, and it left an impact on my mind,” Hessel said in a phone interview on Wednesday, July 21 from the Bootleg fi re camp. The Dooley Mountain fi re affected Hessel in a couple of ways. He remembers vividly the photograph that S. John Col- lins, retired Baker City Her- ald photojournalist, took from Main Street in downtown Baker City on July 30, 1989. The photo shows the fi re’s smoke cloud looming above the city’s historic buildings, the angle of the lens making the blaze seem much closer DANGER “We’ve got a long summer ahead of us.” Continued from Page A1 But it’s the second line, a series of brown dots, that worries Livingston. Because that line represents current conditions, not those of past summers. It tracks the daily energy release component readings for 2021. And for most of July, in each of those six regions, the brown dot line has been higher on the chart than the bright red line. In some cases the brown dot was higher than the red line has ever been. Which is to say, the energy release component has been breaking daily records with a regularity that’s fright- ening for Livingston and other fi re managers. “That’s what’s got us on the edge of our chairs,” Livingston said during a video conference with reporters on Thursday afternoon, July 22. “We’ve got a long summer ahead of us.” With the energy release compo- nent at record-setting levels, every fi re has a higher-than-average poten- tial to turn into confl agration before fi refi ghters arrive, Livingston said. Crews have doused most blazes on the Wallowa-Whitman pretty rapidly, with a majority of the 36 blazes this season burning less than one acre. But the statistics don’t tell the entire tale, Livingston said. “The fi res that we are dealing with are showing a high resistance to control,” he said. “We’ve been success- WOLVES Continued from Page A1 The rancher brought the injured steer by trailer to a corral, where an ODFW than it was (the fi re never got within about eight miles of town). Hessel calls the photo an “iconic image.” But that acreage fi gure — 20,000 — was memorable, too. In 1989, its size made the Dooley Mountain fi re an outlier. It was a time when fi refi ghters considered even a 500-acre fi re a signifi cant blaze. But then Hessel, who started his fi refi ghting career with ODF at age 16, com- pares Dooley Mountain to Bootleg. “This fi re grew an average of 30,000 acres for 13 days straight,” he said. The Bootleg fi re is the sort of blaze that requires a group of specialists — what’s known as an “overhead team” or “incident management team” — to coordinate the efforts of hundreds or even thousands of people, as well as bulldoz- ers and other equipment on the ground, and air tankers and helicopters above. Almost 2,400 people were assigned to the Bootleg fi re. Hessel, who heads one of the ODF’s three overhead teams, said they have been called out more often, and for longer periods, over the past several years. He said it has become increasingly diffi cult for agen- cies to fi nd employees willing to potentially give up much of their summer, to forego family vacations in favor of traveling hundreds of miles to work on a big blaze. “We used to go out maybe only once in a summer,” Hes- sel said. “One of our teams was out fi ve times last year.” The Bootleg fi re is his team’s second assignment this summer. The fi rst, also in Klamath County, was the Cutoff fi re in June. Hessel, whose dad was a Forest Service smokejumper and manager of the fi refi ght- ing air center in La Grande while he was growing up, said incident management teams typically are assigned to a fi re for 14 days, with the potential to extend the stay to 21 days. Team members then re- turn home for a couple days. Hessel, who was sent to the Bootleg fi re on July 10, said he doubts he’ll return home before July 27. And after his time off, he said his team will be “back on the board” — meaning they’re available to be assigned to another fi re. And with most of Oregon enduring extreme fi re danger, Hessel doesn’t expect to wait long for his next job. “It’s become a recurring theme every summer,” he said. man didn’t merely set daily records — they exceeded many previous daily highs for August. — Noel Livingston, “We’ve been seeing August-like fi re management conditions since late June,” Livings- offi cer, Wallowa- ton said. Whitman National Forest That prompted a term that Liv- ingston has adopted, but was quick ful for the most part but it’s taking a to credit to a colleague, Matt Hoehna, unit forester at the Oregon Depart- lot more resources on initial attack ment of Forestry offi ce in Pendleton. to do so.” “90-day August.” For instance, Livingston said some In other words, fi re managers lightning-sparked blazes — the ignition source for about 80% of fi res who are accustomed to fi re danger historically on the Wallowa-Whitman that peaks during August and lasts for perhaps a month or six weeks, — that in a typical summer would in 2021, due to its abnormally early pose no great challenge for one fi re start, has the potential to extend for engine crew, this year are requiring three months. two or three crews. Or even more. Fortunately, Livingston said, almost Livingston said fi re danger, as all of the Wallowa-Whitman’s fi re- fi ghters are here and ready to fi ght lo- expressed by the energy release cal fi res, rather than assigned to fi res component, tends to be cumulative, because logs, limbs and live grasses elsewhere in the state or region. and shrubs all tend to become “We’re where we want to be in terms of resources on hand,” he said. drier as summer progresses and Livingston said the Wallowa-Whit- the weeks with little or no rainfall man has also bolstered its fi refi ghting accumulate. That’s the reason that in most capability by having three bulldoz- ers on contract, as well as additional parts of the Wallowa-Whitman, August has the highest average aircraft. daily energy release component, The ‘90-day August’ even though July, in many years, has The recent record-high energy higher average temperatures. release components are disturbing Unless a major shift in the not only based on the sheer numbers, weather pattern brings much cooler Livingston said, but also the timing. temperatures and widespread rain Starting in late June, when an to the region — and meteorologists historic heat wave descended on the aren’t forecasting anything like Northwest, energy release compo- that — Livingston said he expects nents on parts of the Wallowa-Whit- the energy release component will biologist examined the animal on Wednesday, July 21. The biologist estimated the steer was attacked three to four days earlier. The steer had at least 30 tooth scrapes, including on the rear of both back legs and in front of the front left leg. Based on location, size, number and direction of the scrapes, the wounds are consistent with Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce/Contributed Photo Eric Newman, 18, of Haines, was taken by Life- Flight helicopter to a Boise hospital July 21. Haines man released after pickup crash An 18-year-old Haines man was treated and released from a Boise hospital after the pickup truck he was driv- ing near Haines struck a fl atbed trailer parked on the side of Shurtleff Road Wednesday evening, July 21. Eric Newman was driving a 1998 Dodge pickup, and he had to be extricated after the crash, said Ashley McClay, public information offi cer for the Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce. The incident was reported at 5:11 p.m. Newman was taken by LifeFlight helicopter to Saint Alphonsus Hospital in Boise, where he was treated and released, according to Mark Snider, a spokesman for the hospital. The Haines Fire Protection District, Baker City Fire Department and Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce all responded to the scene. Two Baker City man injured in separate motorcycle crashes on Tuesday, July 20 — David Krieger, 60, and Michael Stephen Blount, 48 — remained in critical condition at Saint Alphonsus in Boise on Friday. L OCAL B RIEFING Zachary Wise named to president’s list at Oregon Institute of Technology KLAMATH FALLS — Zachary Wise of Baker City was named to the president’s list for the spring 2021 term at the Oregon Institute of Technology. To be eli- gible, students must take at least 12 credit hours. Wise is studying civil engineering. Three Baker City students earn academic honors at Pacifi c University FOREST GROVE — Three Baker City students were named to the dean’s list at Pacifi c University. • Emily Black, fall 2020 and spring 2021 terms • Dylan Mastrude, fall 2020 and spring 2021 terms • Morgan Stone, fall 2020 and spring 2021 terms Rotary Club district governor awards Baker City club members Rotary Club District Governor Russell Johnson, of the Idaho Falls, Idaho, club, visited Baker City on Monday, July 19 to present the Baker City Rotary Club with an award recogniz- ing that all club members are supporting the Rotary International Fund. That fund develops humanitarian projects around Johnson the world, including local projects such as the Literary Coalition. Anthony Bailey started his term as Baker City Rotary Club president on July 1, replacing two-year president Ken Krohn. continue to run near, or above, the all-time daily records. Forest restrictions The prospect for a prolonged period of extreme fi re danger is a primary reason that Wallowa-Whitman offi cials enacted the most stringent public use restrictions — Phase C — on July 16. In most summers over the past decade the Wallowa-Whitman either never reached that level, or did so in August. In 2020, for instance, another ab- normally dry summer, the Wallowa- Whitman imposed Phase C on Sept. 12 — and reverted to the less-restric- tive Phase B on Sept. 25. The neighboring Umatilla National Forest, meanwhile, took the rare step of closing the entire 1.4-million-acre forest to public entry starting July 16. According to a press release from the Umatilla, that decision was due not only to extreme fi re danger, but also because three large fi res were already burning on the forest. Livingston said the current situa- tion with active fi res, which take up some of a national forest’s fi refi ghting capacity, is one factor in any discus- sion among forest offi cials about potentially closing the entire forest to the public. Wallowa-Whitman offi cials aren’t having that discussion now, Livings- ton said. But they are exquisitely aware that such a conversation could well be necessary before autumn. wolf attacks on adult cattle, according to the ODFW report. On July 14, an ODFW bi- ologist confi rmed that wolves from the Lookout Mountain Livingston said two key factors, when it comes to the prospect of clos- ing a forest to the public, are whether forest offi cials are confi dent that they have suffi cient resources to deal with a new, rapidly growing fi re, and how high the risk of human-caused fi res is. As he mentioned during the Thurs- day afternoon video conference, Liv- ingston said the Wallowa-Whitman is well-prepared to deal with new fi res now. As for the risk of human-caused fi res, all campfi res are banned under Phase C, and Livingston said he has taken the unusual step of having fi re engine crews, which usually don’t patrol in the evenings, visiting camp- grounds and other popular recreation spots at night to check for illegal fi res. Over the past week, fi refi ghters have reported eight illegal campfi res on the Wallowa-Whitman. “We’re trying to stay on top of that,” Livingston said. One policy that has been postponed this summer on the Wallowa-Whit- man is the practice of allowing some lightning-caused fi res to burn natu- rally in the Eagle Cap Wilderness. Blazes in the 365,000-acre wilderness — Oregon’s largest — can benefi t the land by reducing fuel loading. In 2019 the Granite Gulch fi re burned more than 3,000 acres in the Eagle Cap, the largest such blaze since the Forest Service instituted the policy about 25 years ago. “That’s not a risk we’re going to take this year,” Livingston said. pack had killed a fi ve-month- old calf on a public land grazing allotment, also in the Manning Creek area. A wolf from the Lookout Mountain pack that’s fi tted with a GPS tracking collar was at the location where the carcass was found at about the approximate time of death, according to an ODFW report.