All fire suppression activities are based from an
anchor point (such as lake, rock slide, road or other natural or artificial fire break). From an anchor point firefighters can work to contain a wild land fire without the fire outflanking them. Large fires often become extended campaigns. Incident command posts (ICPs) and other temporary fire camps are constructed to provide food, showers, and rest to fire crews.
Weather conditions and fuel conditions are large factors in the decisions made on a fire. The
National Fire Danger Rating System (NFDRS) helps incident commanders, prevention specialists, and fuels officers make decisions about suppression strategies, burn bans, and land management policy. Fuel models are specific fuel designations determined by energy burning potential. Placed into 13 classes, they range from "short grass" (model 1) to "logging slash" (model 13). Low-numbered models burn at lower intensities than those at the higher end.
Direct attack . This technique is known as pump and roll, or mobile attack. It involves laying down water while the engine moves behind. Direct attack is immediate suppression of the fire with hand tools, water, foam, or line construction. Wildland firefighters often go 'direct' as it is much safer and more effective. Firefighters can easily step into the already burnt area (the black) and use it as an ad-hoc safety zone. However, direct attack has limited effectiveness when fire behavior increases to crowning or torching fire behavior. Wildland firefighters typically construct an 18 inch wide
handline using their tools, such as
Pulaskis, rhinos,
rakehoes, and
adzes. These lines will stop a majority of fires, but sometimes, conditions are more extreme.
Bulldozers with specially trained operators can create
dozerline which is much wider and harder for the fire to jump over or slop over. Firefighters also can use engines in a
mobile attack strategy, moving along the edge of the fire and dousing it with water. This technique is primarily used in grasslands, where low intensity fires can be easily knocked down. Forest thinning and ground burn are more effective in reducing wildfire risk together rather than just thinning or burning. Thinning and burning also must be continued through follow up maintenance, according to the Western Watersheds Project, but this follow-up rarely happens. Forest thinning has brought up concerns that it could increase fire severity, as the sun can reach the lower vegetation and cause additional moisture loss.
Mop-up near Point Imperial, AZ began on Jun. 29, 2016 started by a lightning strike. The threat of wildfires does not cease after the flames have passed. It is during this phase that either the burn area exterior or the complete burn area of a fire is cooled so as to not reignite the same fire. Mop-up operations often entail detailed grid searches for hotspots, using lots of water to cool down the burn scar, and continuous monitoring by fire crews and prevention specialists. Fires have been known to reignite due to poor mop-up, most notably the
Palisades Fire.
Rehabilitation Constructed fire-lines, breaks, safety zones and other items can all damage soil systems and affect both wild and human life, as well as how people decide to tackle there rehabilitation tactics and the types of regulations that can be implemented, encouraging
erosion from surface run-off and
gully formation which are things that can actually be worked at by gathering volunteers that all gather at specific agencies that specify in allowing people to have hands on experience and to actually effect the environment themselves. The loss of plant life from the fire also contributes to erosion. Construction of
waterbars, the addition of plants and debris to exposed soils and other measures help to reduce this, hence why agencies and groups garner support from government agencies and gain certain perks such as approved regulations for rehabilitation and combat purposes, and financial support to further help the volunteers when they help out. ==Fires at the wildland–urban interface==