I recently read a post from D.B. Stewart about fire hydrants. In it, he wrote, Unless there’s one in your front yard, I bet you (like me) may struggle to pinpoint where exactly they are in your neighbourhood. 

He’s not wrong! (Except for adding a “u” to neighborhood, but the guy’s Canadian, so we’ll forgive him that minor transgression.)

“Hey, babe,” I asked Tara. “Where’s our nearest fire hydrant?”
“Good question,” she replied. “I have no idea.”

Turns out our nearest fire hydrant is nowhere. I learned this after scoping out our neighborhood and finding zero, zip, nada hydrants. Honestly, I’d never even given this a second thought before. Fire hydrants are something I’ve always just taken for granted; it had never occurred to me that owning a rural (-ish; the grocery store is a five-minute drive away) property came with trade-offs like this. Stands to reason, given that we get our water from a well. This newfound realization is a tad disconcerting, given the fact that I nearly burned down the yard last weekend.

After spending Saturday afternoon downtown, we got home around 7 p.m. Pretty bushed; it had been a long day.

“We should sit around the fire pit!” I suggested to Tara.
“Great idea,” she said, plopping onto a comfy recliner in the basement. “Let me just rest my eyes for a few minutes.”

I know too well that rest my eyes is code for I’m about to crash hard. Sure enough, my wife was asleep within seconds. Not to be deterred, I went into the backyard, gathered a bunch of wood, and started a fire myself. Within minutes, flames were licking skyward, the wood crackling and popping nicely.

The fire was so good and hot, I decided to take advantage by burning as much debris from our wood pile as I could. We had a mountain’s worth of limbs and branches in one corner, thanks to last month’s storms and a general laziness on my part. How else to explain the brittle, dried-out Christmas tree at the bottom of the pile?

So, I began scooping up armfuls of sticks and twigs and logs and an entire Christmas tree and tossing them onto the ever-growing bonfire. In the past, I’ve broken the branches down by hand and by hatchet, but I was tired and sore after a long day, and that extra manual labor seemed unnecessary. The fire was raging, making quick work of the woody debris; as dusk fell, those flames were shooting twelve to fifteen feet into the air. It was exhilarating! Two hours later, I had burned through the whole enormous pile. I was quite proud of myself.

…until Sunday morning, when I realized I’d gotten maybe a little too carried away feeding the flames. Between the ring of ash around the fire pit, the scorched grass, and–most concerning of all–the singed leaves on our juneberry tree, it appears the fire was a little hotter, the flames a bit taller, than I’d realized.

Oops.

Needless to say, you can understand why a lack of fire hydrants might be concerning. What happens if somebody’s house (or yard, ahem) catches on fire ’round these parts? Are we supposed to go door-to-door and form a bucket brigade with our neighbors? It doesn’t help that we’ve had almost no rain this month and are rapidly heading toward a drought.

My coworker Randy was a volunteer firefighter for three years, so I reached out to him with this “hypothetical” situation. I asked him what would happen if some dumbass out in the sticks accidentally set his property ablaze and there were no hydrants.

They have tanker trucks, he responded. They bring their own water. They have drop tanks so they unload the water into the big foldable tank and head back to the closest water source (could be lake/pond, hydrant, or station). Multiple tankers running if needed.

And he forwarded these pics:

Which did offer momentary comfort. Until he shared a story about how a house literally across the street from the fire department burned to the ground. Seems like it would take more than a few minutes to get that portable tank set up and filled, right?

So, in the interest of safety, I’ve made a new vow: NO MORE BONFIRES. Nothing but tiny little fires for this guy. The kind that are just flame-y enough to toast marshmallows or roast weenies, not burn up your grass and ignite the surrounding forest canopy.

You bring the buns, I’ll supply the dogs. Deal?


66 responses to “Weenie roast, anyone?”

  1. From someone who lives in the country, miles away from the nearest hydrant?
    Deal.
    Our motto is…
    If you can’t put it out with your hose?
    Don’t start it.
    ( And by hose, I mean garden. Not personal. 🤣 )

    Liked by 1 person

    1. So, you’re saying us rural types do double duty as our own firefighters. Gotcha! And don’t you disparage my hose.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I have no knowledge of your hose and shall therefore reserve comment.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I think you got really lucky this time. Smart not to try it again.

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    1. Luckily, there’s no more wood debris left to burn! Fingers crossed for light winds all summer. 🙂

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  3. Oh goodness, that could have ended quite differently…

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    1. Man, how pissed would Tara have been if I’d woken her up from her nap to tell her our property was on fire?

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  4. How bout grilled shrimp, bbq chicken, pizza ?

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    1. All excellent choices. In fact, I’m barbecuing chicken this evening…but on a grill, not a bonfire.

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  5. I burn a lot of debris too and have gone through situations like this a few times. Kinda scary for a bit. I use the water hose and douse all the embers before I go to sleep.

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    1. There is a hose close at hand just in case. I just hope I never have to use it!

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      1. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

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  6. it looks like a scene from a burning man gathering. it’s so easy to get carried away when feeding a fire and before you know it –

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    1. Except a lot less naked people.

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  7. Geeze, that fire looks amazing–but also scary. I’m glad you won’t do it again. Hydrant, huh? Are there some in my development? I think so, but I don’t know where they are! My late husband used to toss gasoline on wood to get a fire started. Needless to say, I had a few strong words about that.

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    1. Oh, my. That is not a good idea, as you well know! Sadly, even my new smoker has a warning about never adding gasoline to the coals to get them going. You know people have tried that before.

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  8. Oh, that was a near miss. Glad that nothing horrible happened, and that you enjoyed the fire and didn’t have any problems until you saw how things went in the light of day. Fire is very scary, obviously.

    We live in a townhome complex in the San Francisco Bay Area, very urban. I know where the closest 2 (perhaps 3) fire hydrants are.

    Your yard looks amazing though. Definitely benefits to your locale.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. On the other hand, you can zip on over to Boudin Bakery any ol’ time you please. I always recommend the turkey and havarti sandwich on sourdough to anyone visiting the Bay Area–and those who try it always fall in love.

      (Yes, I used to live in the Bay Area!)

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      1. My suburb (Walnut Creek) has our very own Boudin, and while I don’t often get a sandwich there, I do buy a loaf of their multigrain sandwich bread every two or three weeks. It is an integral part of 2 of my favorite breakfasts, avocado toast with lemon pepper, and peanut butter toast with fresh berries on top. We call it, ‘the good bread’. Do you know Semifreddi’s? Or are you an Acme guy? The restaurants all use Acme, but we are especially fond of Semifreddi’s sourdough (had some toasted with my eggs this morning…yum)

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      2. I graduated from Milpitas HS and San Jose State. Worked at Valley Fair, where there was a Boudin in the food court. Convenient and delicious! I am not familiar with Semifreddi’s, but then again, I moved away in 1994…three or four lifetimes ago!

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  9. I guess you need a bigger fire pit if you are going to put entire branches in there! Holy Cow, Mark! I think Tara needs to keep a better eye on you! We have fire hydrants all along the other side of our street and are less than two miles from a fire station, but that doesn’t seem to offer any discounts on our homeowners’ insurance.

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    1. For the record, I thought she would be joining me momentarily. I’m the first to admit I need someone to keep an eye on me most days!

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  10. I remember at the closing when we bought our house they had the number of feet from our house to the nearest hydrant on the documents – both the bank and the insurance company wanted that info to determine rates.

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    1. Interesting! Even when I lived in an urban setting, I don’t recall ever seeing that on the closing docs. Not that I even knew to look for it. Bijoux just commented that her close proximity to a fire hydrant has no bearing on their insurance rates. I’d think it would.

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  11. Do you use the ash as compost? Or what can it be used for? I don’t even know…

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    1. Yes, actually, the ash can be composted. We do that with what accumulates in the wood stove during the winter…though not all of it. Tara says a little bit goes a long way.

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  12. fire extinguisher wouldn’t hurt….

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    1. We do have one. Though it was in the house, upstairs. By the time I got to it, things might’ve been out of control.

      (Note to self: buy second fire extinguisher and keep in garage. (Tara actually suggested this yesterday.))

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      1. and maybe one of those fireproof blankets

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      2. I have really earned a bad reputation, I guess…

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      3. Be wary! Best advice for a fire is to get yourself out of the way – fire training course at work said to only use extinguisher to obtain an exit – but admittedly, we’re in London UK. Your post set me thinking about why we don’t have fire hydrants in the UK – answer is they’re all underground. Surprised the above ground ones in the US don’t freeze

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      4. I almost said “I’ve never seen an underground fire hydrant,” but duh…how would I?!

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  13. Sounds like you went a bit bonkers on the bonfire. Yikes!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I was on a roll and so excited to be burning through that pile that had been accumulating since last year, nothing could stop me!

      (A burning yard would have stopped me though.)

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  14. Please tell me the soundtrack to your pyro display was “Burn, Baby, Burn. Disco Inferno . . . ” 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I do love me some disco! Thankfully, I avoided The Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House.”

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  15. I recall reading a story years ago about a firehouse burning down years ago. Apparently, the firefighters were off fighting a fire (isn’t someone left at the firehouse?), and some other firefighters from a different firehouse had to extinguish the flames, but not before significant damage was caused.

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    1. Holy cow. That’s the very definition of irony! What’s next? A police station getting robbed?

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  16. We live on the corner of our block in Los Angeles. Fire hydrant is less than 30 feet from the house and every summer Baby D would get super excited and follow the firefighters as they tested new recruits’ ability to hook the hose up to the hydrants. But in rural NH? Yeah, they run long lines to the nearest pond, which is one reason people have them.

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    1. There is a pond in the adjoining park, but it’s seasonal. Depending on the weather, it could be completely dry in the summer…so I guess it’s best to go up in flames in the winter, if you must.

      Of course, then the pond might be frozen…

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      1. So we’re rooting for a fall bonfire? Cool.

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      2. We’re rooting for a fall small contained fire!

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  17. Oops!

    I actually had the opposite experience – when we were applying for homeowners insurance prior to moving in, one of the questions was “how far are you from the nearest fire hydrant?” Given that we didn’t live there yet, and I didn’t feel like driving over there with a giant measuring tape, I scoured google earth and made my best guess. I’m not sure my number was accurate, but I can tell you exactly where the hydrant is.

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    1. You’re the third person to mention insurance rates and fire hydrants. I had no idea, but that makes a lot of sense.

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  18. Yikes, glad the fire didn’t get out of control. I guess with fire hydrant locations, you don’t need to know until you NEED TO KNOW. Fire department portable tank makes sense, but it does look like it would take a minute. Best to make your own preparations and be smart!

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    1. You’re exactly right. Thinking back to our Rapid City house, I have no idea where the nearest hydrant was there…and we definitely weren’t out in the sticks.

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  19. Dude. You’re so much better at integrating plot than I am (but thanks for the shout-out anyway). Also this: yikes. And this: I’m glad that blank was filled in, although I feel I added more anxiety than anything. Our rural areas have similar solutions, but yes, prevention is best.

    One more thing: I counted 106 uses of the letter u in your post. *shakes head* We Canadians may lose important NHL games to the US quite consistently, but we’ll always have more u’s. Neener neener.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ha…I don’t know which I like better, the fact that we both live in rural areas with similar hydrant (or lack thereof) issues, or that you counted the number of u’s in my post!

      In any case, thanks for the inspiration. No need to worry about fear-mongering; it’s good to know that we don’t have any fire hydrants. I guess.

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  20. Deal. And WTH with the house across the street from the fire station burning down? Come on, people! Does the station not have a hydrant?

    I was in…. NM? And saw a burnt down house next to a fire station. I found it ironic. Maybe it’s actually endemic.

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    1. I vote ironic. Alanis Morrisette never sang, “Isn’t it endemic, don’t you think?” Not nearly as catchy…

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      1. Definitely not as catchy.

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  21. Gosh, now I’m wondering where our street’s fire hydrant is… Your intro made me think of locating my life vest on an airplane. I do that whenever I’m going to fly over the ocean.

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    1. I only look for the life vest if I’m flying over the desert. I figure it’s just as likely to help me there as it would if we crash landed in the Pacific.

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  22. There’s a fire hydrant directly across the street from our driveway. It is clear to me that you do not own a dog because I know where every hydrant is in our neighborhood. They’ve been examined very carefully by my walking partner many times over.

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    1. Ha…I guess the dogs/fire hydrants stereotype is real!

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  23. I should probably be paying more attention, but when you said Pretty bushed, I smiled. My dad used to say that, Mark. I haven’t heard that phrase since…my dad. That made my day. 😊

    Off to find my nearest fire hydrant.

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    1. The weird thing is, I never say that. If you were the type to believe in signs (you are), you could maybe chalk this up as another one!

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  24. Close call, Mark!! Tara would not have forgiven you for burning down the yard and possibly the house, especially since she was trying to ‘close her eyes’.

    I hope you have at least a couple of fire extinguishers on hand.

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    1. We do have a fire extinguisher or two. Talk about something you hope you never have to use!

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  25. Oh my, that’s quite the lesson to have learned (fortunately in time). I was mightily re-assured to spot our local fire brigade using our local streets to train their new drivers to cope with narrowness and tight corners through my home office window. Also very happy to discover their depot is just around the corner from us. One of the benefits of living in a town centre, although not one I’d have considered previously.

    My use of extra ‘U’s in my spelling must drive you nuts 😉

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    1. Your use of extra Us is forgiven because you share so many fun words and phrases. I’m cockeyed to the nilly upon discovering them! (I totally just made that up, but it sounds like something you might say.)

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      1. Snort at “cockeyed to the nilly” 😀 😀

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      2. Sounds like something you would say!

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  26. I find myself collecting interesting bits & pieces of language to amuse you!

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