Refuge Notebook
Peninsula Clarion Article
Dated
10 November 2000
From the Refuge to The Abyss
by Dianne
MacLean
People come to Alaska for a variety of reasons.
For some its definitely a fling: the great fishing, abundant wildlife, every
day a Kodak moment, then returning home to the security of routines and the conveniences
of modern lifestyles. But for some, Alaska is true love, and it is not enough
to be a spectator. There are many people like that on the Peninsula, and many
who work on the Refuge. They live within the seasons, cycles, and challenges that
are unique to life here, often exposed to unforgiving circumstances where routine
decisions affect the well-being of everyone involved. The setting is beyond your
average great place to be; the logistics are more complicated, the weather is
more unpredictable, help is much further away. Alaska provides the yardstick of
bigness against which other places are measured.
During the
past fire season I was sent from the Kenai Refuge to a fire on the North Rim of
the Grand Canyon. I thought that would be
nice. But compared
to the grandness of the Chugach range, or Prince William Sound, or the Kenai Peninsula,
just how grand could the Grand Canyon be?
My assignment was
to manage the helicopter base, where I would address the needs of the aircraft
and their crews, and respond to the priorities of the fire. In short, my job was
to make things run better, rather than worse, regarding helicopter efficiency
and safety. The Grand Canyon National Park has facilities on both the north rim
of the canyon and the south rim. Flying between the south rim and north rim is
known as crossing the abyss.
Visitors to the rims can use picnic
tables along the paved drives, or enjoy the massive stone and timber lodge, shops
and restaurants. Step away from those conveniences and the visitor, or the firefighter,
is engulfed in a hostile environment the scale of which I had not seen anywhere
outside of Alaska. Outings rapidly escalate into life-or-death situations when
people come ill-prepared, still accustomed to security and convenience. Even those
of us whose jobs demand preparedness found sudden shock in any lapse: failure
to carry enough water, to allow enough time, to anticipate the worst.
Late
one afternoon, a call for help came in to our helibase. A rafting accident had
just put 15 people into the Colorado River, and the Park needed a helicopter from
the fire to help pull them out of the canyon, before it got too dark. As we flew
from the North Rim, our pilot radioed that we were crossing the abyss.
Our ship might as well have been a mosquito transported to Mars. The scene was
otherworldly - beautiful and vast on the scale of the Chugach Mountains turned
upside down. Trying to take a photograph seemed pointless. A twisted car body
lay nestled among rocky teeth several hundred feet below the south rim, where
a despondent individual had driven off a month before.
The helicopter threaded
downward through the narrow canyon walls. On the ground, the turning rotors generated
a wind of superheated canyon air that was painful to breath, and we rescuers were
made aware of our own vulnerability: the immediate need to drink, to have brought
enough gear, to not lose communications with the rest of the world. The rescue
proceeded in that tense, forced calm so necessary in emergency response. It brought
a sense of accomplishment as a team, of appreciation for one anothers abilities.
As our pilot called in that we had just crossed back over the abyss and were returning
to the helibase, I thought about Alaska and the Grand Canyon and of their similar,
beautiful harshness. Without this harshness, many things would be easier, but
there would be no test, less of a challenge to meet, and perhaps less of life
to appreciate.
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Dianne MacLean is a career firefighter,
working in both prescribed fire and fire suppression. She came to the Kenai Refuge
last year from the Forest Service, after working several summers on the Chugach
National Forest, which followed twelve years of service on the Okanogen National
Forest in Washington. Previous Refuge Notebook columns can be viewed on the Web
at http://kenai.fws.gov.
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