
Love is a splendored thing, but it can also be highly volatile, as many Fire Country characters have discovered for themselves.
This series is no stranger to intense drama, whether from an entire forest going up in a blaze or a helicopter crashing a wedding.
Many fans automatically think of Bode and Gabriela when it comes to love on Fire Country. However, their relationship is not what you would call a stable or even healthy coupling.

No, if any two people in Edgewater deserve “Couple of the Year,” it’s Vince and Sharon Leone.
Despite being a couple that fights fires together, they have never let the flames of their love for one another die down.
Through thick and thin, they have stuck together and endured hardships that could have easily split them apart. What could be harder for parents than losing a child? How about losing two?
Despite being a couple that fights fires together, they have never let the flames of their love for one another die down.
Through thick and thin, they have stuck together and endured hardships that could have easily split them apart. What could be harder for parents than losing a child? How about losing two?
Vince and Sharon Always Find A Way Forward As One on Fire Country
Except, it didn’t. Sure, Sharon was pissed, as you can imagine or likely remember, but as many real-life couples know, it’s not the good times that show how strong your relationship is.

How you pull together in the roughest circumstances reveals the truth.
Vince admitted to this mistake, and Sharon forgave him because they didn’t let the situation define their relationship.
One of the most relatable aspects of Vince (Billy Burke) and Sharon is that they rarely agree on many issues.
They both run hot and have strong opinions and convictions. The funniest part is that they usually have the same goals but different ideas about how to achieve them.
Hey, every relationship is different, and some people like to have their partner challenge them to make sure they are making the right decision.
It can even help keep the passion alive after decades of marriage. That might explain why Vince and Sharon always seem to be one smolder away from getting it on.

Personally, Vince and Diane Farr’s (Chance) Sharon sometimes feels like the Fire Country audience’s parents because the characters seem so real.
That’s why it’s a little unnerving to talk about them knocking boots, bumping uglies, dancing the horizontal mambo, or doing old lay down, roll around.
My point is that Vince and Sharon aren’t the typical TV couple where everything works out because the plot dictates it.