Grant and the fire bosses had decided that because of the heavy rain and our late night yesterday, there was no rush to get to get the men to the fire. The crew straggled out of the tents looking for their coffee and breakfast and by 8:30 Grant had them assembled and told them they would be hiking up to the fire, which was upslope one half mile away.
It was at this point that Todd first became an issue with the Fire Bosses. They had discovered that he was still wearing his raggedy old running shoes, and when they told him he should put his boots on, he had told them that he didn’t have any boots. This created a dilemma, because of fire safety concerns, boots were a requirement and since we were in a remote area miles from anywhere, there really was no solution to the problem.
Grant lectured Todd about how he had been told to bring boots, and how irresponsible and dangerous it was to be out on a fire without them. Despite all of Grant’s earnest arguments, the words seemed to be sliding off of Todd, just like the rain sliding off of the boughs overhead. In the end, Todd left the camp with the rest of the crew, walking in a single file line into the wet forest and up the slope toward the fire.
Because of my official position as Timekeeper, I was told to stay in camp and help JJ with the camp work and food. The men had made sandwiches for themselves before they left, and so once we had the dishes washed and the camp tidied up, I recorded everybody's start time on my timekeeper forms and busied myself cutting a trail down to the creek, where we would be getting water.
Around 10:30 Todd, now rain soaked, came ambling back to camp. I asked him why he had returned and he said that they needed some chainsaws up at the fire, and they wanted someone to come down to camp to see if we had any.
Then, like I was his closest friend, Todd confided to me, “When they asked for a volunteer to walk back to camp to see if there were any chainsaws, I jumped at the chance, because I didn’t like doing all that work up there, but then as I started walking down here, I started thinking, ‘if there are chainsaws down at the camp, I will have to carry them back up to the fire’ and I started getting really worried.”
I told Todd that luck was on his side, because there were no chainsaws in camp.
“Far out,” Todd replied, and walked over to the table under the tarp and grabbed a handful of cookies from a package. I resumed my hacking away at the underbrush clearing for the trail and after about 45 minutes, I noticed that Todd was still just hanging around the cook tent stuffing his face. I decided that since Todd didn’t seem to possess the motivation to scoot himself back up to the fire; that I had better “play the heavy,” and encourage him along.
“Todd, you’d better be getting back to the rest of the crew, and tell them we have no chainsaws down here.”
“It’s quite a hike all the way back there.”, he replied.
“I’m sure it is, I countered, “and that’s why we pay those big firefighter wages.”
I figured I had set things straight, so I turned back to my trail clearing. Then a bit later, I noticed that Todd had not left for the fire and was messing around in his tent.
I am not one who likes to wield power, but since I had assumed the role of a Forest Service official, I felt obligated to enforce the rules, so I confronted Todd in the tent and tried, to the best off my ability, make things clear.
“Todd, if you don’t get back up to the fire, I am going to have to have to record you as not working, and you are not going to be paid for the time you are hanging around here.”
He came up with a few lame excuses about why he needed to stay around camp, but he did much to my relief, finally head back up the trail to the rest of the crew.