"They were Titans amongst Men." So how many times have you heard a phrase like this? It is so ingrained in what used to be our
culture that now there is a tweeter feed named Titans Amongst Men, and a
Dungeons and Dragons (the silly role-playing game) fanflick, so you know it is pretty common, or at least a known thing. But what does it mean? Well… Let’s start at the beginning.
Who were the Titans?
No, well, yes they are a sportsmoneyball team from Tennessee, but I’m
not talking about those Titans.
Not these guys...
https://www.titansonline.com/photos/titans-patriots-pregame-photos-20249019#ce90aa91-16a3-4a4c-9296-3d89fa193697
https://www.titansonline.com/photos/titans-patriots-pregame-photos-20249019#ce90aa91-16a3-4a4c-9296-3d89fa193697
These Guys!
Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem, The Fall of the Titans, 1596-98
(Notice the convenient placement of..... butterflies, a dragonfly and various body parts.)
(It's like some mad game of twister.)
(Notice the convenient placement of..... butterflies, a dragonfly and various body parts.)
(It's like some mad game of twister.)
I’m
talking about the original Titans, those of Greek mythology. They were descending from the primordial
deities (including Mother Gaia and Father Uranus) and preceded the Olympian
deities (the Greek gods living on Olympus.
Zeus, Apollo, that whole bunch.) (Though Zeus was supposedly a Titan also, he apparently thought he was better than his family, so he separated himself. Stuck up little snot.) Many Titans lived on Mount Othrys, especially the 12 directly descended
from Gaia and Uranus.) And they stood tall, some as 12' or more, literally standing over mere men. Some of them were
‘good’ or ‘bad’ with those definitions sometimes radically different from what
we enlightened 21st century dwellers consider good or bad. But we’ll pay attention to the most famous Titan (who wasn't Zeus.)
Prometheus was the Titan/god/demi-god/deity/whatever credited with sculpting men from
clay and breathing life into us lesser beings.
For that he is a hero. But,
friend to Mankind, he did, later, a while after creating men, one thing that eternally damned him in the eyes of Zeus and the other gods. He gave mankind, who to that point had only
sunlight to live by and ate only raw food, the power of creation – Fire. For that, the Olympians chained him to a rock
and eternally sentenced him to having his liver ripped out by eagles, only to
have the liver regrown in time for the next day (interestingly, the liver is
the only internal organ that can regenerate.
2/3rds of your liver can be removed and eventually what is left will
grow back. Neat, huh?) So, according to the ancient Greeks, Prometheus was The Fire-Bringer. The one deity who allowed
mankind to be more than just a talking animal.
He gave us civilization. (Not Zeus and the rest of those louts, they just used what Prometheus did against us.)(Somewhat of a Satan in Eden thing, but the gods were already complete d(male external reproductive organ that you can also pee through) by the time Prometheus gave fire. In Judeo-Christianity, it was Satan who was the complete d(merotycapt) and God who was the virtuous one (or mostly virtuous, we don't/can't understand what God does, for the most part.)
So, a Titan is a mythical person, a Man amongst men. Someone who towers over mere mortals. And the best of them gave us Life and Fire.
(For a somewhat humorous and different look at the Greek mythology, I recommend reading "Pyramid Power" by David Freer and Eric Flint. And it's follow up, "Pyramid Power" does the same for Norse mythology.)
(For a somewhat humorous and different look at the Greek mythology, I recommend reading "Pyramid Power" by David Freer and Eric Flint. And it's follow up, "Pyramid Power" does the same for Norse mythology.)
Fire can be our friend, allowing us to cook, to heat, to
light, and to make stuff. Fire can also
be our worst enemy. Destroying and
killing, leaving devastation in its wake. In one of the Norse Sagas, the god Thor was tricked by the Troll king(or some giants) into three contests, one of which was eating.
Thor lost to a tiny little troll/giant who ate everything, food, tableware,
the table itself, only later having it revealed that the troll/giant was instead
Fire (Thor also lost a wrestling match to a wizened troll/giant who was Old Age, and lost a drinking match by not being able to drain a horn of mead, which turned out to be The Ocean. But being Thor, he tried, he really tried. He finally figured out he was bespelled, broke the horn on the face of his tormenter, then went all Thor on everyone's buttocks. Good Thor. Wonder if he was thor from all that Thor-ing?) (I find the Norse Sagas much more human-friendly than the Greek myths. Still not totally human-friendly, but definitely more friendly than the Olympians.)
Wild Fire, specifically wildfire, is a wild and dangerous
‘creature’ that yearly an average of more than 73,000 wildfires burn about 7 million acres of federal, tribal, state, and private land and more than 2,600 structures in the United States.* Destroying wilderness, killing animals, destroying farms, businesses,
homes, whole towns, killing people, leaving behind utter destruction in its
wake. And where there is wildfire, there are those who fight it. Sometimes just regular old people, to regular old fire-fighters to those who are specialized in wildfire firefighting.
In the United States, Wildland Firefighters range from the pure amateur, a farmer or rancher with
an old deuce-and-a-half with a tank on it, to organized and funded Hotshot Teams and Smoke Jumpers
(the firefighting versions of elite ground troops and Rangers.) Actual official ground group qualification levels
include: Fuels Mitigation Crews, who deal with taking care of stuff that can
burn; to Level II Incident Management Teams (IMT), capable of defeating smaller
fires or serving as 2nd line troops on larger fires; to Level I IMTs,
called ‘Hotshots,’ that handle the biggest fires. Most IMTs are comprised of firefighters from
multiple agencies on the local and state level.
Both types of IMTs can be shipped around the nation, and into Canada, to
battle wildland fires.
The city of Prescott, Arizona, is the only municipality to ever
have a Level I IMT. From the Prescott
(AZ) Fire Department’s
website:
The Granite Mountain Hotshots were a crew within the
Prescott Fire Department whose mission was to fight wildfires and when not so,
engaged in work to reduce growth of fire-prone vegetation. Originally founded
in 2001 as a fuels mitigation crew, they were later formed into Crew 7, a Type
II IA hand-crew in 2004, and eventually transitioned into a Type I Inter-agency
hotshot crew in 2008.
Get that? A municipal fire
crew designated specifically for wildfire defense went from the lowest level to the highest level in 7 years. From aiding the ‘real wildland firefighters’
to being the ‘real wildland firefighters.’
The Granite Mountain Hotshots were active in fighting fires
for years, all over the nation. From being the brush-draggers to being the guys in the hot-spot. On call, attacking fire on foot, using shovels, mattocks, axes, chainsaws, fire-cans and flares. Carrying their tools and fuel and survival gear on their backs. Humping up and down hill and dale, in hot, nasty dry environments full of ash, embers and flame. They travelled to and from and from spot to spot in two crew vehicles and some pickups, and being heloed in and out as needed. They got air support in the form of tanker aircraft and helos. All of this required great commitment and great sacrifice on their parts, as it tore their bodies up and took them away from their families.
June 28th, 2013, saw the start of the Yarnell
Hill Fire, near Yarnell, AZ. Caused by
lightning, fueled by long-term drought conditions, high daytime temperatures
and extremely erratic high winds, it would burn till July 10th, destroying
8,400 acres of land, 129 structures and injuring 23, mostly firefighters. But…
June 30th, 2013, the 20 men of the Granite Mountain Hotshots were called to set a counter-fire in front of the main fire, burning towards the town of Yarnell. Initially the burn went well, but then an air tanker put it out, forcing them to withdraw and reset closer to the town.
But the winds picked up, pushing a wall of flame and embers ahead of the main fire, right into the retreating men. Caught by the sudden rushing fire, in a shallow 'v' that would funnel winds and fire to them, they struggled to create a protective clearing. They tried to call in air tanker support, to no avail. They dug shallow dugouts. They wrapped themselves in protective portable fire shelters. They did everything conceivably possible. And Fire, in one of its evil forms, blew over them in a firestorm. 19 died in that horrible clearing, some blown out of their protective firesacks, all burned to death. One, saved only by fickle fate, a lookout, separated from his team members, survived, rescued by another Hotshot team.
But the winds picked up, pushing a wall of flame and embers ahead of the main fire, right into the retreating men. Caught by the sudden rushing fire, in a shallow 'v' that would funnel winds and fire to them, they struggled to create a protective clearing. They tried to call in air tanker support, to no avail. They dug shallow dugouts. They wrapped themselves in protective portable fire shelters. They did everything conceivably possible. And Fire, in one of its evil forms, blew over them in a firestorm. 19 died in that horrible clearing, some blown out of their protective firesacks, all burned to death. One, saved only by fickle fate, a lookout, separated from his team members, survived, rescued by another Hotshot team.
19 men. From one city. Doing what they were trained
to do. Doing what they were good
at. What they loved doing. Brothers, fathers, sons. Loved. Gone.
They were Titans, walking amongst men.
Granite Mountain Hotshots
in order of seniority
in order of seniority
End of Shift – 30 June, 2013
Eric
Marsh, 43
Jesse Steed, 36
Clayton Whitted, 28
Robert Caldwell, 23
Travis Carter, 31
Travis Turbyfill, 27
Christopher MacKenzie, 30
Andrew Ashcraft, 29
Joe Thurston, 32
Wade Parker, 22
Anthony Rose, 23
Garret Zuppiger, 27
Scott Norris, 28
Dustin Deford, 24
William Warneke, 25
Kevin Woyjeck, 21
John Percin, 24
Grant McKee, 21
Jesse Steed, 36
Clayton Whitted, 28
Robert Caldwell, 23
Travis Carter, 31
Travis Turbyfill, 27
Christopher MacKenzie, 30
Andrew Ashcraft, 29
Joe Thurston, 32
Wade Parker, 22
Anthony Rose, 23
Garret Zuppiger, 27
Scott Norris, 28
Dustin Deford, 24
William Warneke, 25
Kevin Woyjeck, 21
John Percin, 24
Grant McKee, 21
Sean
Misner, 26
Granite Mountain Memorial at the Prescott Fire Department
from http://www.prescott-az.gov/services-safety/fire/about-the-prescott-fire-department/granite-mountain-hotshots/
The Prescott Fire Department has not rebuilt their Hotshot team, instead transferring low-level wildfire mitigation to their regular crews. The scars of their loss run deep.
* stats taken from https://www.fs.fed.us/managing-land/fire
RESOURCES
Prescott Fire Department:
http://www.prescott-az.gov/services-safety/fire/about-the-prescott-fire-department/granite-mountain-hotshots/
http://www.prescott-az.gov/services-safety/fire/about-the-prescott-fire-department/granite-mountain-hotshots/
A short but fact-filled site by the Prescott Fire Department.
Granite Mountain Hotshots State Park:
https://azstateparks.com/hotshots
https://azstateparks.com/hotshots
This is an Arizona state park at the site of the disaster. Take a look at the terrain the men faced in their final moments. The website also has bios and pictures of the fallen. You can get lost here for hours.
“Only the Brave”:
This is a recent movie release (2017) dealing with this group. How they lived. How they fought fires. How they died. The time-scale is compressed. What I call a “Watch Once” movie. Because it is that good, and that powerful, but also that horrific.
This is a recent movie release (2017) dealing with this group. How they lived. How they fought fires. How they died. The time-scale is compressed. What I call a “Watch Once” movie. Because it is that good, and that powerful, but also that horrific.
You know the stupid saying here in the USA
that it isn’t ‘real’ until someone makes a movie about it? Well, I remember in 2013 hearing about a
wildfire team that died, but I was stupid and wrapped up in myself and then was
recently watching a movie about wildland firefighters and got this sense of
foreboding. And by the end of the movie
I was crying, loudly. (Mrs. Andrew
thinks I’m a big, mushy goober somedays.)
Watch the end of the movie, all the way to the credits. It’s important. Especially the message from the lone survivor. Go watch it. (Gah, watched this movie a week ago and I'm still tearing up just thinking about them. I mourn all 20 of those men. The survivor, well, did he? Part of him, maybe, did, but part of him died, too.)
original movie poster, copyright Columbia Pictures