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Wildland
Firefighting Gear


Introduction

Wildland Fire Statistics
Each year wildland fires devastate the landscape and claim lives. 2005 was the worst year ever, according to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, with nearly 8.7 million acres claimed by the fires.

Take a look at these statistics since 1990, documenting the number of fires and the total acreage burned.
Year
Acres Burned Fires
2005 8,686,753 66,552
2004 6,790,692* 77,534
2003 4,918,088 85,943
2002
6,937,584 88,458
2001
3,555,138 84,079
2000
8,422,237 122,827
1999
5,661,976

93,702

1998
2,329,709 81,043
1997
3,672,616 89,517
1996
6,701,390 115,025
1995
2,315,730 130,019
1994
4,724,014 114,049
1993
2,310,420 97,031
1992
2,457,665 103,830
1991
2,237,714 116,953
1990
5,452,874 122,763
Source: National Interagency Fire Center.
*2004 fires and acres do not include state lands for North Carolina.

Used to be, the wildland fire fighting season across the country began in late summer and continued until the first snows blanketed the countryside, or the autumn rains started.

In the last couple of decades, however, all that has changed. Due to recent global weather phenomena, the more likely scenario is that as soon as the last snow melt trickles into mountain streams and rivers, things begin to heat up in the eastern and western regions. Meanwhile, in the plains and southern areas, dry winters and arid springs have produced parched prairie lands and dry-as-a-stick forests, ripe for random lightning strikes and extensive conflagrations.

No matter what geographic area you're in, experts predict the next five years or so will see increased chances of large wildland fires. The likelihood of you being on the fire line year-round is a definite possibility. So there's no time like the present to start preparing.

Learn even more about Wildland Firefighting Gear. Continue on or click any of the links below to go directly to that topic.

Learn More About Wildland Firefighting Gear
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