Episodes

  • Synthetic Rain | How Don Hallett is Turning the Tide on Wildfires
    Mar 25 2026

    Don Hallett, founder of Wildfire Innovations, explains how his "Rainstream" technology is answering the prayers of fire-threatened communities by creating synthetic rain on demand. Utilizing a mobile, telescopic mast that reaches up to 100 feet in the air, Don’t system can broadcast up to 1,000 gallons of water per minute above the tree canopy. By leveraging the wind—traditionally a fire’s greatest ally—Don is able to pre-wet enormous areas and create a "wall of water" that chokes out advancing flames before they reach the doorstep.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The Rainstream System: How a mobile trailer can deploy a 100-foot mast in under two minutes to provide 18 acres of coverage.

    • Tactical "Synthetic Rain": Using the wind to carry mist and droplets over the canopy for "ember denial."

    • The Physics of Choking a Fire: Why converting water to steam at the point of impact expands the cooling area by 420 times, effectively suffocating the fire.

    • Economic Realities: The massive ROI of protecting 50 homes with a single $700,000 unit compared to the multi-million dollar cost of traditional ladder trucks.

    • Rapid Deployment: The "tradesman's mindset" of building an engineered solution that a small crew can set up in 10 minutes.

    • Automation & Monitoring: Integrating cameras and weather stations atop the masts to allow Fire Chiefs to monitor the front line from a smartphone.

    • The "Adoption" Roadblock: Why the hardest part of innovation isn't the engineering, but changing the minds of traditional municipal agencies.

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    40 mins
  • Neighbors Helping Neighbors | Logan Krahenbuhl on Community-Led Burning
    Mar 18 2026

    Prescribed fire expert Logan Krahenbuhl joins the show to discuss the growing movement of community-based "underburning" in Northern California. Managing the Plumas Underburn Cooperative, Logan coordinates teams of volunteers, students, and professionals to treat the most critical acres of the Wildland-Urban Interface—the areas right around people’s homes. Discover why prescribed fire is a natural process that restores forest health, how to identify the perfect "burn window," and why the risk of an escape is statistically lower than almost any other high-impact mitigation strategy.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The 0.1% Risk Factor: Understanding that over 99.9% of prescribed fires stay within their designated boundaries.

    • Underburning 101: Why burning pine needles while the soil is damp creates a self-extinguishing fire that cleans the forest floor.

    • The "PBA" Model: How neighbors help neighbors manage fuel loads through Prescribed Burn Associations.

    • Creating a Fire Line: The mechanics of preparing a 2-to-5-acre unit using natural breaks and hand-dug "hand lines."

    • The Burn Window: Balancing fine dead fuel moisture (7-10%) with live fuel moisture to prevent "torching."

    • The Mosaic Effect: Why a "spotty" burn is actually better for biodiversity and erosion control than a total, homogenous burn.

    • Smoke & Health: A candid look at the carcinogenic risks of wildland smoke and the need for better PPE (like positive-pressure respirators) in the field.

    • The Dixie Fire Success Story: How pre-burning and thinning saved properties in Greenville before the mega-fire arrived.

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    34 mins
  • Rebeca Gomez | Why Most Disaster Preparation Fails (and How to Fix It)
    Mar 11 2026

    Rebeca Gomez, founder of My Guardian, explains why traditional disaster advice ends up in a drawer—and how she’s using behavioral science to change that. By focusing on the "last mile" of human decision-making, Rebeca has built a loss prevention engine that delivers the right advice at the exact moment a threat is forecasted. From clearing Amazon boxes off a porch to understanding the deadly mistakes made during floods, this episode explores how simplicity, sequence, and real-time relevance can save lives and properties.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The "Last Mile" Problem: Why the biggest gap in safety isn't infrastructure, but the specific human decisions made minutes before a disaster.

    • The Three Principles of Behavioral Change: How My Guardian uses relevance, sequence, and consequence to bypass "choice overload."

    • Death by a Thousand Cuts: How smaller, preventable insurance claims are breaking the system just as much as catastrophic total losses.

    • The Spain Flood Catalyst: The heartbreaking story of the Valencia floods that inspired Rebeca to bridge the information gap in emergency response.

    • Insurance Synergy: How My Guardian creates a data bridge between insurers and homeowners to reward proactive risk reduction.

    • Tactical "Easy Wins": Simple tasks like photographing your home interior and clearing "Zone 0" that every homeowner can do in 15 minutes.

    • Parametric Insurance vs. Traditional: Steve and Rebeca discuss the shift toward objective, sensor-based payouts and localized mitigation.

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    42 mins
  • Insider Tips for Infection Control from Expert Dawn Azevedo
    Mar 4 2026

    Infection prevention expert Dawn Azevedo joins the show to pull back the curtain on how hospitals keep patients safe from the "black box" of healthcare-acquired infections. From the legacy of Ignaz Semmelweis to modern systems thinking, Dawn explains why preventing a mistake is more powerful than treating one. Discover why "movement is medicine," how paramedics can protect themselves against stealthy diseases like meningitis, and why you should never be afraid to ask your doctor, "Why?"

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • Prevention vs. Control: The philosophy behind renaming the field to focus on stopping infections before they start.

    • The Power of the Patient: Why being an "engaged consumer" of healthcare—and even using Google—can lead to better outcomes.

    • Pre-Hospital Safety: Tactical advice for first responders on using PPE as a default to avoid high-risk exposures.

    • Systems Thinking: How hospitals are engineered to make human error difficult, including the surprising role of pre-warming blankets in surgery.

    • The Sick Leave Dilemma: How economic incentives and HR policies can unintentionally encourage caregivers to work while ill.

    • Public Health vs. "Sick Care": Why walkable communities and nutritious food are more influential on long-term health than the hospital itself.

    • The Top 3 Tips: Dawn’s essential checklist for every patient: Wash your hands, ask "Why?", and get moving.

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    50 mins
  • Mitch Zembik | Spared by the Fire, Destroyed by the Smoke
    Feb 25 2026

    Restoration expert Mitchell Zembik explains why surviving a wildfire is only half the battle. Just because your home is standing doesn't mean it’s safe; smoke impingement, soot, and the release of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) from heated vinyl and countertops can render a home unoccupiable. Mitchell breaks down the physics of "phantom smells," the specific materials that act as carcinogen magnets, and the critical steps every homeowner should take the moment they see smoke on the horizon.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The "Standstill" Fallacy: Why a standing home can be just as hazardous as a burned one due to chemical infiltration.

    • Carcinogens in the Walls: How heat releases toxins from common household items like vinyl siding, countertops, and floor coatings.

    • The Phantom Smell: The psychological and physiological science behind why homeowners "smell" smoke long after it’s gone.

    • Porous vs. Non-Porous: Why wall-to-wall carpet is your biggest enemy in smoke mitigation and which surfaces are easiest to clean.

    • The Insurance Knowledge Gap: Why big carriers are slow to incentivize post-fire safety and the "asbestos-like" trajectory of smoke claims.

    • Immediate Exit Protocol: Why turning off your HVAC and killing the main power at the breaker are the two most important things you can do before evacuating.

    • Defensible Space Realities: Why the wood pile five feet from your door is a ticking time bomb.

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    48 mins
  • Implementing the CWPP | Christie Wiley’s 4-Pronged Strategy for Survival
    Feb 18 2026

    Former U.S. Forest Service Crisis Communication Director Christie Wiley explains how she is solving the "capacity gap" in Texas wildfire protection. Despite Kendall County being one of the fastest-growing in the nation—with 94% of development in high-risk zones—it lacked a formal protection plan until Christie stepped in. Now, through the Hill Country Fire Coalition, she is moving beyond paperwork to execute a 4-pronged strategy involving education, risk assessments, roadside mitigation, and insurance incentives.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The Implementation Gap: Why many communities have a plan (CWPP) on the shelf but no boots on the ground to execute it.

    • The 4-Pronged Strategy: A breakdown of Outreach, Risk Assessments, Roadside Hardening, and Insurance Incentives.

    • The Sim Table Advantage: Using technology to show residents exactly how fire moves through box canyons and up ridges.

    • Building a Dream Team: How Christie used the Incident Command System (ICS) to structure her nonprofit with retired fire chiefs and management officers.

    • The "Bridge the Gap" Grant Program: A unique local solution for communities screened out of federal grants due to high average median income (AMI).

    • One Way In, One Way Out: The life-safety reality of narrow Hill Country roads and the importance of expanding 30-foot rights-of-way to 50-foot defensible buffers.

    • The Insurance Carrot: Moving the needle with state regulators to reward homeowners for verified mitigation work.

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    34 mins
  • Evacuation Route Hardening | Captain Estle's Blueprint for Community Safety
    Feb 12 2026

    Wildland Fire Captain James Estle discusses the massive undertaking of rebuilding Evergreen Fire Rescue’s wildland division to meet the growing threat of the "When, not If" wildfire scenario. James breaks down how his team manages 140 square miles of populated mountain terrain through strategic fuel reduction, residential chipping programs, and the critical hardening of one-way-in, one-way-out evacuation routes.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The Suppression Module Model: How a fuels reduction crew doubles as an initial attack resource for district and national deployments.

    • Hardening Evacuation Routes: The physical reality of creating 30-to-150-foot fuel breaks along main "veins" to prevent a Paradise-style disaster.

    • The Home Ignition Zone (HIZ): How mitigation specialists work with homeowners to manage vegetation without clear-cutting the landscape.

    • The 30,000-Foot View: Coordinating with Denver Mountain Parks and National Forests to ensure projects align across property lines.

    • Situational Awareness: Why a "head on a swivel" mentality is required for both active fire suppression and daily chainsaw operations.

    • The Rain vs. Snow Fallacy: Why a wet spring often increases fire risk by "feeding the fuels" that become receptive in the autumn.

    • Insurance Pressures: How the rising threat of dropped coverage is finally driving high community compliance for mitigation work.

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    34 mins
  • Gabbie Lochbaum | The "Canary in the Coal Mine" of the Wildfire Crisis
    Feb 4 2026

    Conservationist and birder Gabbie Lochbaum explains why birds are the ultimate indicator of ecosystem health—and why our current wildfire patterns are pushing them to the brink. From the specialized respiratory systems that make birds 43% more susceptible to smoke than humans, to the "whack-a-mole" history of toxic fire retardants, Gabbie breaks down the complex relationship between avian survival and modern fire suppression.

    In this episode, you'll learn about:

    • The Avian Advantage (and Weakness): How a bird's highly efficient, rigid respiratory system makes it uniquely vulnerable to wildfire smoke.

    • The Power of the Mosaic: Why birds like the Black-backed Woodpecker rely on fire edges, and why massive "mega-fires" are destroying these habitats.

    • Keystone Species: A deep dive into the Red-cockaded Woodpecker and how 35 other species rely on its "forest engineering."

    • Bioaccumulation & Reproduction: How traditional retardants (PBDEs and PFOS) lead to thin eggshells and developmental issues, echoing the DDT crisis.

    • Citizen Science: How everyday birders are using apps like eBird to provide researchers with global climate data.

    • Simple Conservation: Why keeping cats indoors is one of the single most effective ways to protect local bird populations.

    • The Future of Retardants: Exploring the shift toward biodegradable, ground-applied mists to protect waterways and wildlife.

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    51 mins