you said it better. thanks
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So I guess the blackouts extended all the way to the Sierra summit, as I just heard about a guy with an indoor weed crop around the Sugar Bowl area who said his $20K worth of plants froze when the lights went out.
Isn’t Sierra summit near Fresno?!
And the answer is yes. They de-energized that transmission line.
Wow, it isn't funny.
That’s pretty wild! Are people loosing insurance in your area? There are two Nevada county focused fire insurance FB groups.
My next door neighbors were dropped this fall due to wildfire hazard. Their new premium thru the CA Fair Plan with wraparound coverage to fill the gaps is double their previous premium. They bought their house 7 or 8 years ago.
No change in our insurance, but at this point we only have half a house.
Bump.
Its smokey here in Tahoe. All the locals are getting what they asked for.:FIREdevil
Here are some resources I use to ease boredom at work...
Federal fires: https://inciweb.nwcg.gov/ - This will also show fires that started as Calfire and went inter agency
Calfire: https://www.fire.ca.gov/incidents/ - This one used to be better, showing fire outlines but not anymore.
Smoke map and forecasting: https://www.airnow.gov/
NASA Satellite data: https://firms2.modaps.eosdis.nasa.go...19;@0.0,0.0,3z - This is a neat tool, I haven't quite completely figured out yet.
This is a cool one I found that shows the fire outside of Nevada City: https://nevcounty.maps.arcgis.com/ap...9dcc865349e72e
Anyone have any other good ones?
Monster fire complex north of vacaville and fairfiled--125K acres in 24 hours. It shows best in the map in this article
https://www.sacbee.com/news/californ...k=bignews_main
Briefly jumped 80 and forced the partial evacuation of Travis AFB. For some reason the Calfire map and report only indicates part of the fire.
The map in the Bee is from the NIFC site but I can't find it on the site.
Yeah, that one got into something good and blew up today. I'm about 25 miles from it and everything is ashed over. Even got a couple whole leaves size of your palm drifting down from the sky, completely charred. Glad they beat it back across 80, that would be terrible to both Fairfield and Vacaville if it burned between them. Lots of residential there.
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I believe that for if the one where IC ordered a bunch of ambulances early this morning. I haven’t heard the outcome.
Looks like the LNU complex is active in 5 counties--Lake, Sonoma, Solano, Yolo, and Napa. My question is, after the last few years, what's left to burn in Lake County? Seems like there have been massive fires there every year.
"Wednesday morning two strike teams of ambulances were mobilized in Fresno and Tulare counties in order to assist with the fires in Napa County. The two strike teams of five ambulances each will have a total of 10 paramedics and 10 EMTs with two paramedic supervisors. They were initially sent to Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Vacaville. Edgar Escobedo, spokesman for American Ambulance, said their mission will be to respond and stand-by in the event of large-scale evacuations of medical facilities and to support emergency medical services and alternate care sites."
Big Basin State Park HQ burned
[emoji22]
Cross post from the 2020 Wildfire thread:
https://cdn.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOE...-2400x2400.jpg
I did post fire research in the Sierra Nevada for a handful of summers and observed montane chaparral-- whitethorn, deerbrush, and tobaccobrush in particular-- grow back to 5 ft + height in five years or less. 1st summer postfire easy travel, 2nd summer starting to get thick, 3rd summer and it's a heinous struggle. They thrive on fire and fire thrives on them.
Neat fact on those species (manzanita too): They can burn down to little stubs and still resprout from the roots. Their seeds don't become viable unless they are exposed to temperatures which would kill the roots. (150+ or something like that). They have been known to grow from seed that has been in the seed bank for over 100 years and quite possibly around 300-500 years.
Manzanita survives by burning its neighbors to death.
Busy.
Attachment 337726
glad I’m not there
Gee, might need to reconsider my Sonoma County trip next month. Really feel for those displaced by these fires.
Smoke over Carmel beachhttps://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...596789b3c4.jpg
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Holy fuck we are completely smoked out in east/central ID. It’s bad
Ash falling the past two days in Santa Cruz. North county evacuated. Smoke is thick. Considering a road trip as school was cancelled for the month.
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Don't come here. It's even worse. (Just kidding--cleared up a fair bit this afternoon, enough for me to do a short bike ride. Can see a few stars tonight. Looks like they're getting a handle on the Loyalton fire which is where our smoke is from, but there's enough burning that I'm sure we'll have some smoke for a couple of months.)
I was looking at places to stay for a few days near Ukiah. There are some bike trails nearby. My wife needs to teach remotely for her school, and I have meal distribution next Monday from my school, but if we have wifi we can be any where and not worry about the kid staying focussed. Oddly, my school is a 1/3 mile from he evacuated line, so who knows if I can be thee Monday to do distribution.
If we went toward you, we would actually be hitting up our friends place in Kirkwood. No wifi there, so wife can escape there next week.
Never mind...
Twas only a vid.
Didn't mean to wrinkle panties.
The neighborhood we lived in in the Santa Cruz mountains was burned over, our old house is likely gone. Lots of friends losing places right now and it's heartbreaking for them.
My sister got evacuated last night from somewhere in the hills near Portola valley. Guess they are preparing for a wind shift? And there aren't many ways out of there I guess
Damn - sounds like they're fearful of it jumping HWY 35. I grew up in PV/Los Trancos - if it gets in there it will move fast. Also nervous about the vineyards between Cupertino and 35, especially Ridge Montebello
If it jumps 35, many more are fucked. That side of the mountains is dry as fuck. It is that stuff later design to grow to be burned, and it can sweep quickly down toward Palo Alto and Saratoga - loads of homes and vineyards in that path. And the crews are already spread thin enough trying to save people and structures in the SLV.
We've been biking a lot this summer in Wilder and Upper Campus and those areas have been really dry, especially when out of the redwoods. All we are able to do is hope for humidity.
Ugh...
https://forecast.weather.gov/showsig...1#.X0A6zpNKjUIQuote:
...FIRE WEATHER WATCH FOR DRY THUNDERSTORMS LATE WEEKEND INTO
EARLY NEXT WEEK...
.Moisture will advance northward later this weekend and early
next week, associated with what will be leftover of Tropical
Storm Genevieve as it weakens. This remnant moisture will lead to
the increasing potential for isolated dry thunderstorms for much
of Northern California. Lightning with these dry thunderstorms
will have the potential to start new fires.