Kelly Ramsey, the first woman in about a decade to join a California-based hotshot crew, shares her experiences in a new podcast episode. Drawing from her memoir, she highlights the intense demands of wildland firefighting amid escalating climate threats. The discussion underscores staffing shortages and the need for better preparedness in wildfire-prone regions.
In a recent episode of Earth911's Sustainability In Your Ear podcast, Kelly Ramsey opens up about her transformative journey as a hotshot firefighter. As the first woman in roughly ten years to join the Rowdy River Hotshots—a pseudonym for a highly trained California crew—she details the rigorous Marine-style training and physical challenges of the role. Her memoir, Wildfire Days: A Woman, a Hotshot Crew, and the Burning American West, recounts two years on the front lines, where she confronted both raging blazes and personal growth in a traditionally male-dominated field.
The conversation gains added urgency as 2025 approaches, with wildfires intensifying due to climate change. Ramsey points to severe budget cuts that led to the layoff of 1,600 firefighters this year, even as the demand for such elite responders grows. She explains the critical concept of Preparedness Level 5, a scenario where no crews remain available during peak fire danger periods. Under current understaffing, the United States risks operating at this alarming level for much of the upcoming fire season.
Beyond the operational strains, Ramsey addresses the profound psychological and physical toll on firefighters, including the stark reality of on-the-job fatalities. For residents in fire-vulnerable areas, she provides practical guidance on measures like home hardening—reinforcing structures against embers—and effective evacuation planning to mitigate risks.
Originally aired on July 7, 2025, and republished in early 2026, the episode emphasizes the need for greater support for these vital first responders. More details on Ramsey's work are available at kellylynnramsey.com.