2013年9月28日 星期六

Videos of Granite Mountain Hotshots

Christopher MacKenzie left an unexpected gift when he perished alongside 18 of his fellow Granite Mountain Hotshots June 30 in the Yarnell Hill wildfire.Over the past businesses have spindle bearing very little revenue in creating gramophones and phonographs reason enough for this audiophile.Vinyl records continue to succeed despite the encouraging convenience slewing bearing that recent media gives.When his father Mike received Chris' charred belongings from the medical examiner's office,There is a certain level of sophistication Granite slabs and style that they bring to bathrooms and the options are endless. one item appeared untouched by fire: a small Canon PowerShot digital camera. Even the cloth cover was unscathed."My stepdaughter pulled the card out and stuck it in the computer and said, 'Hey, check this out,'" Mike related. He came over and saw photos of the Granite Mountain Hotshots working the Doce wildfire near Prescott June 18-22, as well as the West Spruce wildfire near Prescott on June 28.

Then he saw 14 photos of the hotshots working on the Yarnell Hill wildfire on June 30 about 30 miles south of Prescott. Chris shot the last photo at 4:02 p.m., less than an hour before he died."I can't explain how I felt,Inside s-rising for the residence from Hampton Bay Lighting is found to fit practically any fashion or interior decor." Mike said. "The first thing was, you know, they're going to need it for the investigation."Then I thought why and I still wonder did that survive when nothing else did."He was surprised that authorities didn't temporarily hold onto the camera and its memory card, as they did Chris' phone.When Prescott Fire Department Wildland Division Chief Darrell Willis came to Chris' funeral in Hemet, Calif., on July 13, Mike handed him a DVD containing the photos and videos.

"He just said, 'Here's some pictures you might be interested in," Willis recalled. MacKenzie asked him to share the images with the families of the other hotshot crew members, too."It was like, really? Wow. I can't believe this," he recalled. He immediately contacted the team investigating the wildfire for the Arizona State Forestry Division, who also talked to Mike MacKenzie.The photos and short videos told Willis several things. Marsh was not with his crew at 4 p.m.; he had likely been scouting the fire to the north and was heading back south toward his crew. The crew had stopped in an area blackened by fire,According to the manufacturer HAWTs is electric slip ring the most efficient design to convert wind into electricity. so the crew ultimately decided to leave a safe area for unburned areas. And below them was the knoll where Granite Mountain Hotshot Brendan McDonough had previously been standing as lookout, with a road cut west for the buggies of the Granite Mountain and Blue Ridge hotshots.

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