I feel for you downwinders.
Last year there were six days between July 25 and Labor Day when AQI in my hood (and 75 miles in any direction) was less than 80 (my maximum for MTB rides). Even then you could taste the smoke.
I feel for you downwinders.
Last year there were six days between July 25 and Labor Day when AQI in my hood (and 75 miles in any direction) was less than 80 (my maximum for MTB rides). Even then you could taste the smoke.
And three hours later, AQI in town is 95…
A new wildfire has shut down Highway 20 through the North Cascades in Washington. I have a feeling it could be closed for a while.
BC just got lit up big time last night from lightning. It has been an incredible summer so far..... FFS!
www.skevikskis.com Check em out!
^^^Yeah, Oregon had over 1000 lightning strikes Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. Small fires everywhere on west slope of Cascades, Southern OR and Central OR.
Much of Oregon is on fire
And the area shaded in red signifies Red Flag Warnings
That blue dot it where I live. Prevailing winds are westerly
AQI has been Teh Suck
The reading of 32 is at the District Ranger Station
I think their sensor is inside the building.
I’m really beginning to hate living here - it’s to the point where you can’t go outside for half the summer
SLC fire near Ensign peak, started about 5pm tonight. Great pic by someone at KSL
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^^^ Man I was watching helicopters fly back and forth from Red Butte and jets flying in circles all evening. Sketchy...
sigless.
Same, I love the inter mountain west
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You’re not the only one I guess.
Why I Gave Up the Pacific Northwest to Move Back East
We've had three nice summers in a row in Helena, with very little smoke. I knew we were due.
^ After some rough summers recently, northern NM is doing good <knock wood>. Raining as I type. I’ve been afraid to mention it.
Though Ruidoso got its ass kicked, rain probably did the most damage.
It used to be a lot smokier in the West according to historians. Summers were smoky and it makes sense, natural and native set fires without suppression.
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I’m too lazy to look up a reference, but Tom Swetnam, tree-ring-ologist extraordinaire, estimated that lightning and native fires in the Jemez Mtns (a not particularly big range in northern NM) burned about a million acres annually before (and this is key) industrial grazing and logging fucked up the system. The beautiful well-spaced Ponderosa pine forests of yesteryear burned regularly. You can bet the skies weren’t totally clear all summer. Wasn’t as hot back then tho.
Yosemite Valley is another place that burned regularly before Europeans showed up and got all heavy-handed. Old pictures show a way less dense forest.
I’ve seen pictures from the late 1800s in the Cascades and it was a very different landscape than after a century of fire suppression. Lots more “parkland” forest, meadows and bare ridge lines. The result of natural and human caused fires.
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Yeah, me too. Other than the summer fires, I love it here. But every summer beginning 2016 we’ve had major fires in the area that make outdoor living unbearable for more than a month.
And it’s painful to see the places where I used to play since I was a kid turn to ash. Something like 400k acres in just the McKenzie River drainage has burned in the last 8 years. Whole towns burned.
I did get a 90 min MTB ride early AM the last three days when AQI was ~70 so maybe I should quit whining.
That’s what I was thinking, he’s soft
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We’ve had several friends leave the Sierra foothills for NE, all, in-part, to escape the smoky summers. Last summer didn’t work out for them….
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