(This post was last modified: 04-09-2018, 04:05 AM by churchilllafemme.)
I was daydreaming about spending a summer working at a National Forest fire lookout, which many years ago had been a half-baked plan of mine, and as I cruised the web I came across a story about the Needles Tower Lookout, in the Sequoia National Forest in California, which burned in 2011. According to an article in the Porterville Recorder,
"The fire that burned down the 74-year-old Needles Fire Lookout Tower was caused by an ember that escaped from the tower’s chimney... According to the report, the female tower attendant, a U.S. Forest Service employee, had a fire going in the wood-burning fireplace when an ember escaped from the chimney and landed on the tower’s wood-shingle roof, catching the roof on fire. The tower occupant tried unsuccessfully to use a fire extinguisher to extinguish the flames.
Built in 1937-38 by the Civilian Conservation Corps, Needles Lookout, which was situated atop one of the Needles’ pinnacles at 8,245 feet elevation, was located on the Western Divide Ranger District in the Sequoia National Forest. The tower did not have a fire-retardant roof, Alonzo said.
A USFS helicopter dropped several buckets of water on the roof of the tower when it was ablaze, but the extinguishment efforts were unsuccessful. Four other fires were started by the tower’s burning debris that rolled down from the rock on which it was built. Those fires were each less than an acre in size. Fire crews eventually put out the fires."
The tower appears to have had a really spectacular view.
John