Right now 75 active, large wildfires are burning across the United States, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
Some of the largest fires are in California, Colorado, Arizona, Washington and Oregon with more than 2 million acres burning.
Wildland firefighters are among those on the front line, putting their lives in harm’s way to save others and protect property. It’s a risk one man from Washington understands first hand.
In August 2015, rookie Daniel Lyon was responding to a fire on a hot dry day in north-central Washington. In less than four hours, the Twisp River Fire grew from 2 to 264 acres, at one point doubling in size in just 15 minutes.
It was Lyon’s first season as a firefighter as part of Engine 642. Two and a half hours into fighting the blaze, the winds shifted and the team from Engine 642 found themselves surrounded by flames.
In an effort to escape, their engine careened off a road and down a hill. Lyon managed to get out of the truck and ran through the flames to get out.
His fellow firefighters Rick Wheeler, Tom Zbyskewski and Andrew Zajac did not survive.