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Links to Updates on the Northern California Fires

When it comes to clean air around Mount Shasta we’ve been very lucky. The smoke has been hanging somewhere else lately, and I’ve been too lazy to visit my Wundermap to find out exactly where.

Can you see how clean the lines are around the pine needles of last night’s sunset, though? I’m having the Great Printer of sendoutcards make a greeting card of this one. Sad to say, the colors were intensified by dirty air coming from the direction of Happy Camp. For the latest posted update on the Panther and N. Ukonom Fire , click here.

Or, check out this paragraph I lifted from the actual report: “Friday, (August 23rd) observed fire behavior on the Panther and North Ukonom Fires was moderate with isolated torching. All fire growth occurred in the wilderness. Firefighters began construction on a segment of line in the wilderness south of Ukonom Lake to check the eastward progression of the fire. Crews continued to make good progress repairing fireline elsewhere outside of the wilderness. Today, crews will continue the line construction in the wilderness. Other crews will repair, mop up and patrol fireline on the rest of the fire.”

I really like that word “torching”. There’s plenty of dead and dried-out trees ready to explode, so I can just imagine what they’re talking about. It’s kind of scary, though. But “Wilderness” is the key word, don’t you think? It provides some very telling info on how the fire is viewed by those in command.

Speaking of viewing, Chris and I flew over the burning zone on the way to Salt Lake because of our convoluted flight path. We couldn’t see any crews, though. We could see many tendrils of smoke from separate blazes, rising up out of the remote mountains on the west side of the plane.

I understand why the Forest Service sometimes follows the let-it-burn policy, but I wonder when all the Northern California Lightning Fires will burn themselves out—you know, run out of fuel jackpots. Here’s what the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection has to say:

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger

2008 Lightning Series Overview

On June 20, 2008, a thunderstorm system moved over California striking over two thousand lightning sparked fires. California has recieved ( i before e except after c, folks) assistance from state, local, federal and even national agencies to help combat these fires. More…

Estimation for containment of the Panther Fire, just south of Happy Camp, is August 28th. But like I said before, folks, containment only means someone draws a line around all the blazes, and everybody gets to work trying to make that a reality. Basically, it’s just where firefighters have chosen to make a stand. There are no guarantees.

For a full update on all the Northern California fires, click here. You can get exposed to some real fire-speak. Again, I like their descriptive terms: “creeping and smoldering within interior islands, fuel jackpots, potential for roll-out, smokejumpers…..”

Smokejumpers are exactly what comes to mind, though: Heroic types who jump from the sky into remote inaccessible ares that are smoking. For a more detailed description, follow the Wikipedia link. If you have a yearning to be one, click for their home page, but you might want to read this next line first: “Smokejumpers completed work in Division L (South of Ukonom Lake) and were extracted.

That word “extracted” kind of scares me. Just imagine being extracted from this:

Fire Information

Current Fire Information

When CAL FIRE responds to a major incident the Department will create a web site. Major emergency incidents could include large, extended-day fires, floods, earthquakes, hazardous material spills, etc. More…

Happy Tales,

Laura signing off

p.s. no p.s.

Now You See It…Now You Don’t or Up in Smoke!


Smoke came on little cat feet, drying and graying the green mountain folds. Where is our beloved southerly wind, we cried? Day over Mount Shasta breaks orange while we mourn the skies of yesteryears.

(Sorry, folks. But there’s nothing like the comfort of a melodramatic moment.)

Time’s Up! Chris and I have no views of the usual mountains or valleys, so our trained eyes are beginning to drop to ground level, where we spotted a beautiful gray feral cat this morning. It seemed to be munching one of the many exotic weeds, and I wondered if hunger was the issue, so I set out in the smoke with a handful of cat food.

This makes three different ones I’ve seen lately, cats that is–all of them stopping by periodically to run the gauntlet of manzanita along our 300 foot driveway. I figure they’re hunting for Oregon Towhees, Scrub Jays and Quail. This is the first year out of eight that I haven’t seen many bevies or covies of quail motoring down our pathways. The word must be out now. Foxes, coyotes and cats sure are plentiful.

The word must be out about heavy smoke, too. Chris and I have a retail store in Mount Shasta, and our summer business is lagging behind last year’s by as much as 26%. Some wildfires are burning unchecked, I’m told, and I believe it. The 1000+ acre blaze seventeen miles west of Fort Jones forced the closure of 16 miles of the Pacific Crest Trail and would require smokejumpers. Sad to say, the smokejumper base at Cave Junction, Oregon was closed down to save money. I read that in the Mount Shasta Herald in a letter to the editor but found no information on the net. I can confirm that we have the latest technology in air pollution monitoring, though, thanks to a well publicized Homeland Security grant.

To allow fires to burn themselves into oblivion with little care for air quality is one of the many controversial policies of the Forest Service. Federal officials call it “reintroducing fire to the landscape.” National Park Managers call it “appropriate management response” or “wildfire use”. Politicians call it budgeting, but most folks around here call it just plain scary.

I remember back about twelve years ago when they let a wildfire “use up” a whole bunch of Yosemite National Park, and many people got upset. It’s touchy business–deliberately setting fires, even by the so-called experts. A sudden wind shift or gust can not only burn too much forest but turn an entire town into small particle contaminants. Hence the reason, local pollution boards are sometimes asked in advance to relax their standards for air quality. (That’s not exactly what I meant, but you get the picture.) As a person inhaling contaminants from these fires, I have mixed feelings. Unfortunately, burns both prescribed and otherwise often get out of hand. I could list a dozen or more, but that’s why we have the Los Angeles Times. Click on the word ‘dozen’ and you’ll see what I mean.

In any case, authorities said most of the remaining 33 blazes are on remote federal forest lands and pose little threat to homes–just to the many wildlife homes and the lungs of those who live in homes. Thanks to our new equipment, the California Air Resources Board issued a health warning late Monday for Northern California. The S.F. Chronicle also gives a bleak outlook: This month-long fire event now dubbed the Northern California Lightning Series wasn’t the only one expected for ’08, as California continues to be plagued with drought. September and October typically bring the most devastating blazes.

Mount Shasta as Viewed from Weed, Ca  www.sendoutcards.com/site

But, but, but, wait a minute, folks. What will be left to burn?

For a picture of Mount Shasta in its better days, email me and I’ll send you an exquisitely beautiful specimen, complements of  (SendOutCards). Just say the word and I’ll even throw in some fancy poetry.

Laura signing off.