Amherst Town Hall inaccessible at the moment
Just after 6:00 PM last night, as our first real winter storm was starting to pick up steam, an emergency call came in reporting a contained "stove fire" at 711 Main Street about a mile downhill from town center.
The first unit on the scene reported heavy smoke and -- even more alarming -- that the fire was not contained within the stove. A "box alarm" was struck, automatically toning off duty personnel and call firefighters.
Two engines and an ambulance responded, and the fire was quickly knocked down without injury.
711 Main Street. Large wood structure
Total time on scene, just over an hour.
I asked Assistant Chief Stromgren how unusual it is for a stove fire to break out of containment, wondering if the fire literally burns through the metal or does it just become so hot it transfers the heat to adjacent combustible materials?
He replied:
"It is a little
unusual but does happen, as in this case. The fire actually finds its
way up and out thru the vent for the oven. This fire was fueled by
plastic Tupperware
type products that had been stored in the lower half so it had a lot of
fuel and burned hot enough to actually melt the metal vent louvers on
the front of the oven."
As usual the incident was handled in a coordinated manner by public servants doing their job while the rest of us sheltered in place.
Dispatchers notify both APD and AFD and whoever is first on scene reports back initial impressions.
In this case that initial assessment instantly escalated the response via a box alarm. APD then shuts down Main Street above and below the house so firefighters can run a line to the nearest hydrant. The chaplain also responds to help comfort the victims.
And the DPW had been out since early afternoon making sure the streets were passable for all us citizens but even more important -- emergency vehicles.
Because fire needs very little time to become a killer beast.