Wildland Fire Operations Research Group
Advisory Committee
Ray Ault
Colleen Mooney
Greg Baxter
Gary Dakin
Jim Thomasson
Jonathan Large
Kelsy Gibos
Rex Hsieh
 

Group Supervisor

When I was seven our family moved from Calgary to Southern California. A close family friend had worked as a fire fighter in and around the San Bernardino area when he was young. This is an area that can have big fires in the fall, fanned by the Santa Ana winds they can put on a spectacular show. We were poor and this is what we did for excitement and entertainment when I was a kid. We would drive out at night about 20 miles from the fires and watch the incredible glow as the fires raced up the mountains. My earliest impression was that fire fighters are a noble bunch and that this would be a worthy career.

As fate would have it after high school I went to work with the BC Forest Service in the summer and in 1978 started on the Salmon Arm District Fire Suppression Crew. 79 was a terrible fire year in the Kamloops region and a 9 person crew from Lower Post along the BC Yukon boarder came south from the rain to help with the inaccessible fires. The crew called themselves the Spider Crew or Rapattack. In 1980 the Rapattack crew moved to Salmon Arm and became a provincial resource and I was one of the locals hired. I stayed with Rapattack for three seasons until the opportunity to join Alberta’s newly formed Provincial Helitack Program. My job as a co-ordinator was to develop the operations manual, train the rappellers and share in supervising the conventional and rappel crews. It was an exciting time I’ll never forget.

Two buddies and I started Wilderness Fire Management Inc., a contract initial attack and prescribed burning company in 1985. I left Alberta in 1986 to manage the company. At the peak of operations Wilderness Fire employed 130 seasonal fire fighters from nine bases and actioned up to 350 fires in a season. It was a terrific experience. Changes in B.C. provincial politics ended the privatisation initiatives within government and the opportunity for contracting. I closed down the fire operations after the 1992-fire season and enrolled at Asia Pacific Institute to earn an MBA in International Business.

I returned to the fire community as the Superintendent of Fire Equipment with the B.C. Ministry of Forests in Victoria in 1994. This was the period of reengineering with in the Protection Branch and during the two fire seasons I managed the fire equipment function significant changes occurred including the consolidation of 46 warehouses into 3 central locations.

My partner and I moved to Jasper in 1996 where I worked seasonally with the BC Ministry of Forests as a Protection Assistant for four summers until joining FERIC. During the winter months I consulted and for the past couple of winters taught business at Lethbridge Community College.

Email: Ray Ault

Phone: (780) 865-6977

Advantage Report - Use of sprinklers and aqueous gel for structure protection from wildfire - case study 2 5/28/2009

Advantage Report (with video clips) - Use of sprinklers and aqueous gel for structure protection from wildfire 5/15/2008

Use of sprinklers and aqueous gel for structure protection from wildfire 3/18/2008

A Recommended Standard for Off-highway,Ground-based Water Delivery Systems for Alberta 2/28/2007

Development of a recommended standard for off-highway, ground-based water delivery systems for Alberta 8/21/2006

Field performance evaluation of Wickman-100™ fire pump 2/17/2006

Infrared Scanning - Collection of Hot Spots 7/7/2005

Test Burns at Fort McMurray and Slave Lake in Mowed and Unmown Grass Plots 7/5/2004

Advantage Report - Capabilities of airborne infrared remote sensing systems to detect hotspots 4/26/2004

Sprinkler system trial in the NWT 8/8/2003

Results from NWT 7/25/2003

In Fire Camera specification 5/16/2003

Exploratory Research: Protection of wooden power poles from wildfire 5/5/2003

Advantage Report - Thermal responses to exercise while wearing industrial protective headwear 1/8/2003

Advisory Committee Members on Wildland Fire Operations Research Group 10/18/2002

Advantage Report -- Assessing the need for footwear with protective toecaps for wildland fire operations in Alberta 10/4/2002

Sprinkler Research Preliminary 9/17/2002

Protective Headwear Design Project Page 9/5/2002

How to Fit Boots 9/4/2002

Examples of Recommended Footwear for Wildland Fire Fighters in Alberta 9/4/2002

Sprinkler Methodology 8/15/2002

Sprinkler System Project Main Page 6/26/2002

Airborne Infrared (IR) Remote Sensing System Trial Photo Gallery 1/12/2002

Ray Ault - WFORC group supervisor 10/11/2001

Wildland Fire Operations Research Group (WFORG) current project list 8/17/2001

Information about FPinnovations Wildland Fire Operations Research Group (WFORG) 8/16/2001

Tank Design project main page 7/10/2001

36092001 Personal Pretective Equipment Project 7/10/2001

36052001 Airborne Infrared Scanning 7/10/2001


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