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Home : News : State Partnership Program
NEWS | June 17, 2011

Guard aviators battle Florida wildfires

By Air Force Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa Florida National Guard

PALM COAST, Fla. - The Florida Army National Guard has joined the battle against wildfires in northeast Florida this week, providing valuable aviation support to civilian firefighters trying to contain blazes in Flagler County.

Soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 244th Aviation Regiment, are flying three UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters to support the Florida Division of Forestry in suppressing wildfires in the Palm Coast and Espanola areas of Flagler County.

The Black Hawk crews, stationed at the Flagler County Airport, are helping the wildfire control efforts by dropping water on wildfire lines using 780-gallon collapsible water buckets attached to the helicopters.

According to the Division of Forestry, ongoing drought conditions have fueled wildfires across the state and more than 3,500 wildfires have been reported in Florida since January. Those fires have burned more than 240,000 acres, and current forecasts expect dry conditions to continue in the near future.

According to Army Maj. Randy McCreary, the mission felt like déjà-vu for some of 16 aviators and crew supporting the wildfire suppression efforts.

“We’ve actually performed this same mission in this same airport in 2007,” McCreary said. “It’s pretty much the same, just another go-around.”

On Wednesday, the National Guard Black Hawks dropped nearly 32,000 gallons of water on areas of the Espanola Wildfire, and on Thursday the helicopters dropped an additional 35,000 gallons in the area when the fire jumped containment lines.

“We’ve worked for many years with the Florida National Guard,” said Air Tactical Coordinator for the Florida Division of Forestry Robert Duty. “They’re very effective and we’re glad they’re here.”

Duty, who is working with the Guard Soldiers at the airport, explained that nearby water supplies in retention ponds and lakes have limited the time it takes for the helicopters to pick up more water and return to the fire. He estimated the Black Hawks were dropping water on the fires about every four minutes during a mission.

“We’re doing initial attack on new fires, as well as supporting ground troops on the existing fires,” Duty said. “We’ll get a call from one of the operations’ section chiefs or a fire department, and we’ll immediately launch two or three Black Hawks and they start dropping water on the fire.”

Speaking to the pilots and crewmembers on Thursday, Forest Ranger Pete Donahue assured the Soldiers their assistance was critical to the Division of Forestry’s efforts to contain the blazes:

“You made a real difference out there. It may not feel like it, but you did…Everyone is a little bit more comforted when you are there.”

According to Duty, the majority of the currently active wildfires in the area have been attributed to lightning strikes.