There’s a Reddit thread with links explaining a lot of the design and material choices. Many I had no idea about like foam in the vents that expand and seal when an ember hits them.
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There’s a Reddit thread with links explaining a lot of the design and material choices. Many I had no idea about like foam in the vents that expand and seal when an ember hits them.
Same thing happened here in Colorado during the Marshall fire… entire neighborhoods gone with one or two homes still standing. Nothing but luck involved (relatively speaking).
Santa Rosa CA 2017
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubbs_Fire
Los Alamos NM 2000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerro_Grande_Fire
Ruidoso NM 2024
https://www.koat.com/article/1400-st...homes/61207764
The list goes on. The LA fires affected more people because…LA, but our memories and media exposure are both limited.
There are no excuses, there were many warnings, the insurance companies all detailed the risk when they pulled out, they had to per the law “Poor wildfire management”. There were 40 fire trucks out of service with no funds to repair them, the chief wrote a letter voicing her concerns almost a yr ago.
I’ll respect the fire service of those in here by shutting up, but you guys of all know who,is doing their job, and who did not.
High res photos from Palisades and Eaton
https://wilg.github.io/la-fire-maps/...040277500.html
https://wilg.github.io/la-fire-maps/...040277300.html
When you talk about defensible space, it’s hard to reconcile what happened in Altadena without also considering building materials and design.
Bass was already an election away from having to find a new job, try not to let it influence your propaganda narrative when she doesn’t get reelected.
Blue skies and a distinct lack of smoke plumes today.
Argh
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Argh
The Eaton fire image is really weird. It seems like whole neighborhoods are intact, and then there’s one or two houses burned.
I’m sure most of you seen this, but this is a pretty good example of the wind and ember situation I was talking about
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DEnFa...B2YjR3MWJwZmR0
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...dbffc6defe.jpg
Seems Cono is arguing for more taxes to pay for Fire Departments, which I think is a great idea. People too often vote for fiscal conservatives who vote to limit public spending on vital services like fire departments, and who give sweetheart tax breaks to big business interests, and developers who overbuild neighborhoods to maximize profits within the space they hold title to.
Fire Departments love spending money on all the latest best equipment, and keeping ready to save lives and property, they are only limited by the amount of taxes people are willing to pay, and how much of the tax revenue is channeled to essential services rather than allocating in favor of real estate development and other industries.
Prove it.:the_fingeQuote:
I’ll respect the fire service of those in here by shutting up
Rasputin on point.
There were folks arguing against our new firehouse that it shouldn’t have a weight room. I’m like holy shit. I think they should not only lift weights, but have a personal trainer on staff too.
Everybody wants weak firefighters. [emoji849]
Yup, really lucky because we can rebuild. Many are not allowed to rebuild, and insurance has nothing to do with it. They could get a $500k payout and if FEMA says your structure is only worth $400,000, then you are limited to $200k, assuming you haven't made any improvements in a year (some areas the look back is 5 years- those people are screwed). Living on a floodplain is not for the weak, or the poor apparently.
Just to be clear, I don't live on the water. Our neighborhood backs up to Tampa Bay, but there are acres of mangrove area between us and the water. Our flooding came from the brackish fed ponds on the golf course behind us. They all feed back to the bay, which is great when you are catching tarpon, snook, and redfish in a golf pond, but kinda sux for keeping the bay out of your house.
@meadow skipper and others with extensive wildland fire experience - I'd be curious to hear your opinions on where prevention and mitigation resources should best be deployed? What's the next best alternative to prescribed burns in areas where they are difficult (and I imagine impossible in some cases) to conduct due to population growth?
I’m all for money going to essential services and not illegals, or other fairy tale horseshit.
The Japanese had plans to torch the west coast with balloons.
Also, again, they were not doing basic things like brush removal etc. I bet if you cut down a tree with a fire approaching and was wrong you’d be cited.
My buddy is one of those,guys whose dad was sffd, and still couldn’t get hired. He’s in Marin, but ordering pumps and fire retardant. He said the only homes that survived were saved by home owners.
Ok, for the mouth breathing morons, this didn’t happen because of the Mayor or whatever, it happened because of this. (Key Takeaway, mostly due to Oceanic Heatwaves, and related drought).
Gore was right. PERIOD.
https://www.vox.com/climate/394005/p...rnia-explainer