
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources and many local volunteer fire departments are responsible for battling wildland fires in some of the state’s most remote regions. For that reason, more than a decade ago the Maryland Forest Service used federal grant money for volunteer fire departments to install a solution–dry fire hydrants.
A dry fire hydrant is a non-pressurized pipe system permanently installed in a water source such as a lake, stream, or pond that permits the withdrawal of water by drafting from a fire truck to provide a reliable water source for fire suppression close to the incident.
DNR worked to install 114 new dry hydrants across the state, increasing the availability of rural water supplies. At the same time DNR took inventory statewide of known existing dry hydrants. The publication titled “Maryland Dry Hydrants” found on the DNR website provides a listing of 419 known dry hydrant sites on a county by county basis.

With this continued cooperation among fire agencies, and leveraging of existing resources such as the dry hydrant system, DNR and part-ner agencies can help protect Maryland’s most remote regions from the spread of wildfires.
dnr.maryland.gov/forests
Article appears in Vol. 25, No. 3 of the Maryland Natural Resource magazine.