It took a week to do it, but Florida firefighters reported on
March 7 that the 16,000-acre “Iron Horse fire” was
fully contained. Crews had been fighting the blaze on the Brevard
County and Volusia County border a few miles west of I-95 since
Monday, March 1, with one firefighter suffering serious burns,
reported Orlando TV station WESH (“'
Iron Horse Blaze Burns
17 500 Acres
”). With limited manpower and equipment, fire
commanders had to balance the goals of containing the fire’s
spread and protecting valuable property, reported Central Florida
News13 on Wednesday, March 3 (“
Winds
cause flare ups at 16 715 acre Iron Horse Fire
”).
Division of Forestry official Cliff Frazier told reporters,
““There's no way to say we have enough crews to battle
this fire at every inch of the way, so we're battling it in phases
we know that's going to be effective.”
Even while focusing on houses, firefighters could not protect
every building. The YouTube video below shows an outbuilding
engulfed in flames after being overrun by the fire. Experts say the
intense heat of peak fire is only present for a few minutes, not
enough to ignite a building; but to protect buildings, dry brushy
growth and large trees have to be kept clear from the zone
immediately around the building. Home landscapes that are carefully
maintained to remove fire fuel have a much better chance of
surviving when fire touches the area, studies show.
Fire has targeted this area before. Residents of the Lake Harney
Woods subdivision in Oak Hill were on alert in case of evacuation
orders, reported the Daytona Beach News-Journal, but a burn-over
two years ago meant that fuel that might support the current fire
was thin on the ground (“
Subdivision
residents on alert
“). “"Everything has already been
burnt," resident Cindy Decker told the paper.
If the fire was surrounded, that didn’t mean it was out,
fire officials emphasized. It may take weeks or even months and a
long rainstorm to put out all the embers and sub-soil smoldering
remnants of the fire, they said — and for now, live flames
are still cropping up within the fireline perimeter. On Monday
morning, March 1, smoke from the fire caused a four-vehicle pileup
and closed a 13-mile stretch of I-95, reported News13
(“
Bad
pileup on I 95 amid heavy smoke from Iron Horse
Fire
”).
And with the official fire season just beginning, officials say
Florida will be lucky if a traffic accident is the worst
consequence the state sees from fire this year. Florida typically
ranks among the nation’s top ten states for wildfire
occurrence: in 2007 (an especially bad year), fires burned more
than 500,000 acres in the state, and as recently as 2009, fire
consumed 124,000 acres. This year may be another bad one, officials
told the News-Journal (“
Officials
Conditions still prime for fires
,” by Dinah Voyles
Pulver). Fire official Mike Kuypers told the paper that the Iron
Horse fire is an early arrival. It’s "pretty unusual to have
a fire this large this early in the fire season,” Kuypers
said, adding, “We're a couple of months early. That doesn't
bode well considering they're still expecting a fairly dry
spring."