Was the fire in Virgin River real?

Was the fire in Virgin River real?

No matter what calamity befalls the small town at the center of Virgin River, one thing’s for certain: Its people will come together to protect one another. And that’s exactly what happens in the fifth and sixth episodes of Season 5, as a wildfire blazes through their Northern California town, leaving plenty of destruction in its wake.

As the fire closes in on Virgin River, the residents we know and love prepare for the worst. Mel (Alexandra Breckenridge) heads back to the clinic to treat patients with smoke inhalation, while Doc (Tim Matheson) and Cameron (Mark Ghanimé) tend to an injured firefighter. Hope (Annette O’Toole) takes charge of the evacuation, while Jack (Martin Henderson), Brady (Benjamin Hollingsworth), and Preacher (Colin Lawrence) light backfires and rescue trapped residents. Even teenagers Lizzie (Sarah Dugdale) ) and Denny (Kai Bradbury) help rush people to safety.

The wildfire episodes present some of the biggest challenges the Virgin River team has faced — not only in terms of production logistics and acting challenges, but also because of the very real threat wildfires now play in our daily lives. Said actor Kai Bradbury on set in 2022, the fires are “unfortunately topical, but I’m glad we’re addressing it.”
Instead of setting the kind of fires that would put Virgin River’s British Columbia set in danger, “we had a lot of special effects,” star Martin Henderson told Tudum in 2022. “We had wind machines and ash blowing through the air and explosions and propane flames so you could feel some of the practical heat next to you.” Bradbury explained that a lot of the fires he dealt with on set were via LED projection, plus “fake ash and smoke and sweat.”

Tudum also spoke with Dr. Emily Fischer, a professor in the department of atmospheric science at Colorado State University who was forced to flee from the devastating Cameron Peak Fire in 2020, who says that the episodes were quite similar to her own experience.

“[Virgin River] hit a lot of the chaos of events like that — the road closures, the very mixed understanding of how fast wildfire can spread, the very mixed understanding of what the right thing to do in that situation is,” she says .
Fischer, a climate scientist who works with the organization Science Moms to spread awareness about climate change, says she was also struck when watching the series by “the amazingness of the incident responder teams and the incident management teams and what a gift to society they are .” The show reminded her of the first responders who helped her and many other families evacuate during the Cameron Peak Fire. “I was beyond impressed with the teams here in Colorado during our events, and our countywide emergency services for these kinds of events are a beautiful example of how the world could work. When a wildfire comes, people can and often do collaborate at all levels of government, at all political affiliations, to do the right thing. It’s really a heartening thing.”
Actor Colin Lawrence told Tudum much the same thing on a 2022 visit to the Virgin River set. He was proud, he said, that his character was able to rise to the occasion and help his town survive. “Preacher was a Marine, so he’s used to being in high-stakes situations,” Lawrence says. “He bonded with his brothers, and they did what they had to do to make sure that the town was as safe as it could be.”

For the cast of Virgin River, it felt meaningful to act out a scenario with such urgent real-world parallels. As wildfires continue to threaten communities around the world, “I think it’s so important to focus on these things,” said actor Annette O ‘Toole. “Sometimes the small towns, they can be completely obliterated.”

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