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The 老夫子传媒 Journal is JPR's members' magazine featuring articles, columns, and reviews about living in Southern Oregon and Northern California, as well as articles from NPR. The magazine also includes program listings for JPR's network of stations.

Southern Oregon wildfire teams deploy drones that shoot flaming ping-pong balls

A pilot gets ready to fly the drone for a mapping mission
Roman Battaglia
/
老夫子传媒
A pilot gets ready to fly the drone for a mapping mission

Wildland firefighters are always looking for new technology to make their jobs easier and safer. Firefighters are now using drones in their fight to protect communities.

Since Mid-August, firefighters have been battling the Rum Creek Fire in rough, mountainous terrain along the Rogue River in southwestern Oregon. Traditionally, teams use a combination of people on the ground and manned aircraft above to identify spot fires, where flying embers have sparked new fires outside the main fire鈥檚 perimeter.

Traversing the thick brush up steep hills can be both exhausting and dangerous for firefighters. That鈥檚 why a small four-man team is just south of the fire on Galice Road with technology that is being used more to help identify fires without the risk.

The pilots are launching a coffee-table-sized drone into the thick, smokey air above.

As the six-propeller aircraft flies up, it disappears into the smoke. The team turns towards a large TV inside a trailer, where they can see from the drone鈥檚 cameras.

The drone takes off into the smoke
Roman Battaglia
/
老夫子传媒
The drone takes off into the smoke

鈥淚t鈥檚 got a really powerful infrared camera and so we can see where it鈥檚 at,鈥 says Patrick Edwards, a pilot for the Interagency Unmanned Aircraft System program. 鈥淪o we don鈥檛 have to send humans in there to walk through the broken terrain.鈥

The infrared camera detects heat signatures. As the drone crosses the Rogue River towards the Rum Creek Fire, hotspots appear in bright red on the screen.

Edwards says the camera isn鈥檛 detailed enough for mapping, but it鈥檚 a valuable tool to identify where firefighters should be prioritized.

Another benefit of this drone is catching what humans might miss. Edwards says the drone鈥檚 camera can spot a fire as small as a dinner plate, something a team of firefighters on the ground might miss as they navigate difficult terrain.

The use of drones in fighting wildfires is relatively new. Edwards says it鈥檚 really kicked off in the last three years.

"We don鈥檛 have to send humans in there to walk through the broken terrain."

The four person team in Oregon has assembled from around the country to pilot these drones. Edwards hails from the Everglades in Florida. Another pilot, Jordan Black, came from Tennessee. Black says there aren鈥檛 enough pilots around the country to form dedicated companies yet.

鈥淲e鈥檙e currently kinda scattered all over,鈥 Black says. 鈥淏ut moving forward I think it will probably be more cohesive groups that are going out.鈥

The Interagency UAS program is composed of federal firefighting agencies, including the U.S. Forest Service, Department of the Interior and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Black says firefighting agencies are recognizing the value of these drones.

鈥淟ast year there was a large push for trainings,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd 10 to 12 trainings were completed with 10 to 20 students per training. So we鈥檙e in the hundreds at this point.鈥

These drones aren鈥檛 used just to look at the fire from afar, they鈥檙e also used to proactively start new fires, with flaming ping-pong balls.

Patrick Edwards points at the areas where they've ignited fires along the tops of ridges
Roman Battaglia
/
老夫子传媒
Patrick Edwards points at the areas where they've ignited fires along the tops of ridges

鈥淭hese lines right here, they鈥檙e called ping-pong balls that we dropped into the woods to try to establish fire on these ridgelines,鈥 Edwards says, pointing to a map on the TV, where they鈥檝e ignited fires along the tops of four ridges near the riverbank. 鈥淪o they鈥檒l start backing down these drainages so it doesn鈥檛 shoot up and take out timber.鈥

If everything goes well, the controlled burns will prevent the fire from crossing the river.

Behind Edwards are several boxes of the 鈥減ing-pong balls鈥 used to ignite the fires. The drone is fitted with a special machine that holds the balls, and injects them with ethylene glycol, triggering a chemical reaction.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e about yea big and they drop out of the aircraft gently,鈥 he explains. 鈥淎nd after about 30 seconds they ignite.鈥

The controlled burns they started that morning caught successfully, and their goal was accomplished. Firefighters expected high winds shortly after the controlled burns took place, and because those hills had already burned, the fire never made it across the river.

Two men put away the drone
Roman Battaglia
/
老夫子传媒
The team prepares to store the drone after its flight.

Edwards says the drone itself can cost upwards of $40,000, including the camera, the fire ignition machine and the drone itself. But when comparing that one-time cost to the value it brings in keeping people safe, he says, it鈥檚 worth it.

鈥淲e鈥檙e doing the IR [infrared], looking out here for spots,鈥 Edwards says. 鈥淭hose guys that are supposed to be out here looking through the brush, looking for hot spots, they twist a knee, break a leg, hurt their back, they鈥檙e out. It could be a lifelong injury.鈥

Expect to see these drones become standard among the tools firefighters use in wildfires. As the drone safely returns to its landing pad, the team begins to pack up their equipment to head to the northern edge of the fire, where another supervisor has requested their help.

Roman Battaglia is a regional reporter for 老夫子传媒. After graduating from Oregon State University, Roman came to JPR as part of the Charles Snowden Program for Excellence in Journalism in 2019. He then joined Delaware Public Media as a Report For America fellow before returning to the JPR newsroom.