“My dad told me everything he learned about fire was from Apaches. Apaches were well known to be warriors—fierce, the last to surrender to the government. At the same time, fire doesn’t care who you are. It will take you out whenever it wants to. We’re just in the way.”

These words, from a firefighter, open this recent short documentary profiling the Geronimo Hotshots. The Hotshots are a group of elite wildfire firefighters from the San Carlos Apache Reservation in southeastern Arizona, USA. Unemployment in the area is high, and firefighting jobs are one of the few stable opportunities for work. The job means spending most of the year on the road though, battling the most intense wildfires in the United States.

Long hikes are often required to reach the wildfire. Photo is a video screen shot.

“Your mom, your dad, your uncles, brothers, sisters, cousins—one of them probably fights fire,” says Squad Leader Jeff Belvado.

The Geronimo Hotshots are one of seven Native American hotshot crews in the United States who are sponsored by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

This revealing documentary features GoPro footage from the Geronimo Hotshots’ 2013 fire season, shot by crew member Samson Belvado and put together by the The Atlantic filmaker Sam Price-Waldman.

Pretty cool view of a chopper dumping fire retardant into the flames. Photo is a video screen shot.

GrindTV caught up with Waldman to discuss the project.

“I first heard about the Geronimo Hotshots when we were looking at possible video stories for a previous Atlantic magazine article on the Granite Mountain Hotshots,” Waldman said. “We came across a NPR piece about the Geronimo Hotshots. I was fascinated by the work that hotshot crews do to begin with, and the Geronimo crew was coming from such an interesting background that I knew there was something there worth pursuing.”

“There is a long tradition in Apache culture of using wildfire as a natural part of the landscape. One aspect that I was not able to touch on in the video is that the San Carlos Apache Tribe also has a very successful landscape and fuel management system on the reservation, where they use natural wildfires to benefit the land.”

It’s a really physically demanding job. Endurance is crucial. Photo is a video screen shot.

Asked about the selection process for the Hotshot crew, Waldman explained that it’s “very difficult, as they are the most trained and elite group of handcrews. There are many factors that go into the selection…Julius (the superintendent) was very clear that he doesn’t hire people who just want to do the job for the money. He hires people who really care about the work.”

The bare minimum physical requirements are:

1.5-mile run in a time of 10:35 or less (about 7-minute mile pace)

40 sit-ups in 60 seconds or less

25 pushups in 60 seconds or less

There is more on page 11 of this pdf: http://www.fs.fed.us/fire/people/hotshots/ihc_stds.pdf.

“In the offseason, [the crew is] required to do at least an hour of fitness training per day, five days a week.”

Team work is key. 20 is stronger than 1. The team they do what they can to help their community when they are at home. Photo is a video screen shot.

Asked about the further community work of the hotshot crew, Waldman said that “when they’re not on assignment, they do a lot of work in the community, from teaching classes, to helping chop firewood.”