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Where are the Lessons?

We are the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center. A big part of our job is to collect lessons and share them.How do we do that?Well, sometimes it’s complicated. But not always.Here is the simple version of how it’s done. Lessons typically come to us through some sort of Incident Review. You know, FLA's, RLS's, LLR's, those types of documents. We collect those documents and put them into our Incident Review Database.So, one answer to “Where are the lessons?” is: “In the IRDB”.

Leading the Learning

This post originally appeared on the Wildland Fire Leadership Blog as part of their 20th anniversary campaign.

When Lightning Strikes

Have you heard the story about what happened to the two Helitack crewmembers assigned to their less-than-one-acre Kidney Lake Fire last August?Both firefighters were hit by the same lightning strike.

Hello Darkness . . .

IntroductionTransparency, Vulnerability, Honesty, Bluntness . . .

2020 Incident Review Summary

Cover of the 2020 Incident Review Summary“Action without study is fatal.Study without action is futile.”Mary Ritter Beard

Tighten Your Chaps and Talk About Rocks

By Travis DotsonHere are a couple lessons from 2020. These particular lessons are highlighted in our 2020 Infographic. These lessons sound very basic---because they are.Basic lessons are fantastic because you can very easily implement them.Remember where these lessons come from---actual incidents.

Saws, Rocks, and Trees

By Travis DotsonHere are a few more pieces of the 2020 Infographic.  This portion simply lists a few numbers we added up based on reports we received. The numbers alone may be enough to generate discussion, but a bit of context is always helpful.

Writing Wrongs

A portion of the 2020 Year End Infographic.By Travis Dotson, Analyst, Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center