"The first battle against wildfire was never fought in the forest—it was fought against complacency. We lost that battle. Now we're fighting storms of sparks instead of preventing them."
A.G.
We Were Warned for Years. Now the Forest Is Cashing the Cheque. Are We Ready for the Storm of Sparks?
By the time you smell the smoke, the argument is already over.
Every summer now follows the same script.
The weather forecast becomes a wildfire forecast.
People check evacuation alerts before they check the sports scores.
Parents quietly wonder whether they should pack family photos before school supplies.
Children grow up knowing what a "go bag" is before they learn long division.
And still, many of us act surprised.
Why?
We were warned.
Not last week.
Not last year.
For decades.
Scientists warned.
Fire ecologists warned.
Indigenous communities, who managed these landscapes with fire for thousands of years, warned.
Foresters warned.
Emergency planners warned.
Insurance companies warned.
The data warned.
The forests warned.
Yet somehow society collectively shrugged and decided tomorrow was always someone else's problem.
Now tomorrow has arrived.
Welcome to the Age of Permanent Fire
Let's stop pretending this is an "unusual wildfire season."
When every year becomes another record year...
When "once-in-a-century" events happen every few summers...
When entire towns repeatedly evacuate...
When smoke travels thousands of kilometres...
When millions breathe hazardous air...
...it is no longer an emergency.
It is the new operating system.
That is uncomfortable to admit because emergencies end.
Systems don't.
Climate Change Didn't Light Every Match
Here's where the conversation usually becomes useless.
One side screams:
"It's entirely climate change!"
The other screams:
"It's bad forest management!"
Both are partly right.
Both become wrong when they pretend their explanation is the only explanation.
Climate change creates hotter temperatures.
Longer droughts.
Earlier snowmelt.
Longer fire seasons.
More lightning.
More days where one spark becomes an inferno.
Poor forest management leaves enormous fuel loads.
Decades of suppressing every natural fire allowed forests to become overloaded with dead wood.
Communities expanded deeper into fire-prone landscapes.
Power infrastructure aged.
Human ignitions increased.
All these realities can exist simultaneously.
Reality refuses to fit inside political slogans.
Nature Isn't Broken.
Nature Is Doing Exactly What Nature Does.
Fire isn't evil.
Fire built western forests.
Many ecosystems evolved to burn.
The problem isn't fire.
The problem is us.
We built towns where forests naturally burn.
We built power grids through forests.
We paved roads into wilderness.
We logged.
We planted.
We suppressed fires.
We fragmented ecosystems.
Then we acted shocked when nature continued following its own rules.
Nature doesn't negotiate.
Physics doesn't vote.
Forests don't care about election cycles.
The Most Dangerous Lie Is That Technology Will Save Us
Every year governments announce:
More aircraft.
More helicopters.
More drones.
More AI.
More cameras.
More satellites.
All valuable.
None magical.
Technology helps detect fires.
It does not make forests less flammable.
It cannot lower temperatures.
It cannot make drought disappear.
It cannot instantly remove decades of accumulated fuel.
It cannot guarantee your community survives.
Technology buys time.
It cannot buy immunity.
The Political Cowardice Is Astonishing
Nobody wants to tell voters the truth.
Real wildfire adaptation is expensive.
Very expensive.
It means:
- Hardening communities.
- Prescribed burns.
- Indigenous-led fire stewardship.
- Restricting development in dangerous zones.
- Updating building codes.
- Underground power infrastructure where feasible.
- Creating defensible space.
- Massive investments in emergency response.
- Accepting that some places may simply become too dangerous to rebuild exactly as before.
None of these fit neatly into campaign slogans.
So politicians promise preparedness.
Preparedness matters.
But preparedness without transformation becomes theatre.
Children Are Growing Up Under Orange Skies
Perhaps the greatest tragedy isn't the burned forests.
Forests recover.
Eventually.
Children remember.
Imagine being ten years old and learning that every summer might end with sirens.
Imagine measuring your childhood by evacuation alerts.
Imagine smoke replacing summer holidays.
This isn't abstract climate policy anymore.
This is developmental psychology.
This is public health.
This is memory.
Entire generations are growing up with wildfire anxiety becoming normal.
That should terrify us more than the flames.
Stop Calling It "Resilience"
One word has become dangerously overused.
Resilience.
Communities are resilient.
Firefighters are resilient.
Families are resilient.
Resilience is admirable.
But resilience should never become an excuse for endless suffering.
People shouldn't have to prove how resilient they are every single summer.
Real success isn't surviving disaster.
It's preventing unnecessary disaster.
Insurance Companies Already Understand the Future
Here's a reality check.
Insurance companies don't care about ideology.
They care about mathematics.
When premiums rise...
When coverage disappears...
When rebuilding becomes unaffordable...
They're not making political statements.
They're calculating risk.
And increasingly, the numbers are ugly.
Markets often recognize reality before governments do.
This Is Bigger Than Fire
Wildfire is only the opening act.
Heat.
Floods.
Smoke.
Infrastructure failures.
Power outages.
Crop losses.
Water shortages.
Biodiversity collapse.
Public health crises.
Mental health.
Economic disruption.
Fire is becoming the catalyst that exposes every weakness already hiding beneath the surface.
The Storm of Sparks Has Already Begun
Perhaps the greatest mistake is thinking the biggest wildfire season is still coming.
Maybe we're already living through it.
Maybe the records we've shattered are simply stepping stones.
Nobody knows.
And anyone claiming certainty is selling confidence, not science.
But uncertainty cuts both ways.
The future could be better than feared.
Or worse.
Preparing for the worst isn't panic.
It's responsibility.
We Were Warned. The Question Is No Longer Whether We Listened.
The forests have changed.
The climate is changing.
Communities are changing.
Children are changing.
The only thing still resisting change is our political imagination.
We keep treating wildfire as a seasonal inconvenience instead of a civilizational stress test.
Because that's what it has become.
Not just a fight against flames.
A fight against complacency.
Against denial.
Against short-term thinking.
Against the comforting fantasy that next year will somehow return to normal.
Normal isn't waiting just beyond the next rainy season.
Normal has already burned.
The question now isn't whether the next storm of sparks is coming.
The smoke on the horizon answers that.
The only question left is whether we finally have the courage to prepare for the world we've spent decades pretending would never arrive.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide
