Igo Ono Volunteers

Igo Ono Volunteers Igo Ono Volunteer Fire Department

Volunteer fire station with covering from Diggins road on Placer, Foster Ranch Road on Gas Point and then all the way to the Shasta borders in Platina.

Take care do your defensible space while we still can. Give your neighbors who can't do it a helping a hand
04/19/2026

Take care do your defensible space while we still can.
Give your neighbors who can't do it a helping a hand

04/17/2026
04/04/2026

Interesting

03/31/2026

3800 Block of Yolla Bolly Rd, Igo

03/28/2026

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest says that motorists should slow down and turn on headlights when encountering smoke on the road. Forest officials will evaluate weather conditions in the hours before

The Pulaski has always been my tool of choice!
03/26/2026

The Pulaski has always been my tool of choice!

In the summer of 1910, a man named Edward Pulaski led 45 men out of a burning forest in northern Idaho and into a mine tunnel and held them there at gunpoint while the greatest wildfire in American history burned over them.
The Big Blowup of August 1910 burned three million acres across Idaho and Montana in two days — driven by hurricane-force winds that turned individual fires into a single continental conflagration. It killed 85 people, most of them firefighters. It is still the largest wildfire in recorded American history.
Pulaski was a Forest Service ranger based in Wallace, Idaho, forty-three years old, a former miner and surveyor who had been fighting the fires in the Coeur d'Alene National Forest since August 19. On the evening of August 20, the wind changed and the fire exploded around his crew. He made a decision in minutes: a mine tunnel he knew about, two miles away, was the only shelter that might survive what was coming.
He led 45 men through burning forest to the tunnel entrance. By the time they reached it, several men were trying to run — panic, which Pulaski understood was reasonable and lethal. He stood at the tunnel entrance with his service revolver and told the men that anyone who ran would be shot.
He did not intend to shoot anyone. He intended to save everyone, and panic was the mechanism most likely to kill them.
The men went in. Pulaski worked at the tunnel entrance, beating out flames with his hat, pouring water from a nearby ditch onto the portal timbers to keep the entrance from igniting, working until he collapsed from smoke inhalation. When he regained consciousness the fire had passed. He called into the darkness: "Are the men still alive?" A voice from inside answered: "Yes, but barely."
Five men died in the tunnel from smoke inhalation. Forty survived. Without the tunnel, the survival count would almost certainly have been zero.
Pulaski survived but was permanently blinded in one eye and had reduced lung capacity for the rest of his life from the smoke. The Forest Service initially proposed to deny his disability claim on procedural grounds. A public outcry — the story had been reported nationally — forced a reversal.
The most lasting consequence of Edward Pulaski's survival, beyond the forty men he kept alive, was a tool. During his recovery, Pulaski designed a firefighting implement that combined an axe and an adze in a single head — allowing a firefighter to both chop and grub with one tool. He manufactured the first prototypes himself. The Forest Service adopted it in 1913. It became the standard wildland firefighting tool in America and remains so today.
It is called a Pulaski.
Every wildland firefighter in America uses one. Most of them know the name. Some of them know the story behind it — a man who held forty-five panicking men in a mine tunnel at gunpoint and then, during his recovery, designed a better axe because there was still work to do.

03/18/2026

🌡️ Extreme heat is on the way across parts of California.

The map shown here uses CalHeatScore, a new statewide tool that ranks heat risk in every ZIP code from 0 (low) to 4 (severe) based on weather forecasts and historical health impacts.

Higher scores mean a greater chance of heat-related illness, especially for older adults, children, outdoor workers, and people without reliable cooling.

Use the tool to check the heat risk in your community and find local resources such as cooling centers:
👉 https://calheatscore.calepa.ca.gov/

Heat safety tips
• Hydrate often and avoid strenuous activity during peak heat
• Check on neighbors, older adults, and pets
• Take breaks in air-conditioned spaces or cooling centers
• Never leave children or pets in vehicles
Extreme heat is one of the most dangerous weather hazards in California. Stay informed and take steps now to protect yourself and your community.

Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment

02/05/2026

Redding Fire Station #1 is a piece of design history!

Built during the bold, machine-age era of the 1920s–30s, Station 1 showcases Art Moderne style—a sleek design movement that broke away from old-school revival architecture. The flat roofs, smooth walls, rounded corners, curved glass, and ribbon windows are all about speed, progress, and modern life.

Designed by Masten & Hurd and built as a Works Progress Administration (WPA) project, this firehouse wasn’t just modern for its time—it still turns heads today!

While it’s not the original Fire Station #1 location, this building has become a powerful symbol of Redding’s firefighting tradition. The best part? It’s still an active firehouse, protecting the city just as it has for generations.

Here’s to a historic building that continues to serve, protect, and inspire.

📸: Grayson Hartman

01/03/2026

Address

13958 South Fork Road
Igo, CA
96047

Telephone

+15303962400

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Igo Ono Volunteers posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share