Thursday, January 3, 2008

California Fire News

California Fire News

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NWS: Special Weather Statement -145 MPH winds

Posted: 02 Jan 2008 11:12 PM CST

The National Weather service released a "Special Weather Statement" late today with alarming warnings for the High Sierra with Blizzard warnings and high wind warnings involving 145 MPH winds on the Eastern Slopes of the High Sierra and into Nevada.

Highlights of the Statement -
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 4 AM TO 6 PM FRIDAY FOR WESTERN NEVADA ALONG AND SOUTH OF INTERSTATE 80.
Blizzard warning North of I 80 Sierra Nevada's- 4 am Friday to 4 am Saturday
Blizzard warning South of I 80 Sierra Nevada's- 4 am Friday to 10 am Saturday including Lake Tahoe and Mono County.


THIS STORM WILL PRODUCE STRONG AND POTENTIALLY DAMAGING WINDS ON FRIDAY. THESE WINDS ARE FORECAST TO COMBINE WITH HEAVY SNOW TO PRODUCE WIDESPREAD BLIZZARD CONDITIONS IN THE SIERRA. STATE AND LOCAL EMERGENCY MANAGERS ARE WORKING WITH THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AND ARE IN THE PROCESS OF PREPARING FOR EMERGENCY RESPONSE

WINDS WILL INCREASE TO 80 TO 100 MPH WITH GUSTS NEAR 145 MPH LATE THURSDAY NIGHT AND CONTINUE THROUGH FRIDAY AFTERNOON. FOR THE EASTERN SIERRA SLOPES AND WESTERN NEVADA

Read the whole thing here
http://www.edis.ca.gov/
Message:KREV4009225039 from KREV@nwws.oes.ca.gov

Got rain? - SF Bay Area get prepared now!

Posted: 02 Jan 2008 01:28 PM CST

SF Bay area (CAL FIRE NEWS) - The San Francisco Bay Area wild lands that burned in wild fires last summer could be hit hard with this incoming weather event.

The incoming rain is expected to begin noon Thursday and will taper off Sunday. This weather event is predicted to bring very heavy rains and winds gusting over 50 Mph

Areas burned this year in the 47,760 acre Lick Fire which hit Henry Coe State park particularly hard this summer could see 2 inches of rain in a matter of hours according to the latest weather reports.
and two years ago the 34, 217 acre Canyon Fire which burned northeast of the Lick Fire perimeter in Del Puerto Canyon did not see much rain last year and new growth vegetation is sparse which could equal land and rock slides.

Another trouble spot could be near Stevens Creek in last years Stevens Fire area which could receive tremendous amounts of rainfall.

If you live in area impacted by wild fires last year or has a previous history of problems during heavy rains get prepared now!

You know what you need better than anyone such as your medications, extra eye glasses, etc.
Are you also ready to shelter in place and or protect your property? maybe some bottled water, MRE's, flashlights, tarps, timber and sandbags?
When thinking about evacuation plans remember your pets in the plan, transportation, water, food, shelter just like you.

Make your plan and backup plan now - Stock your supplies and hold on this could be a bad one.

2007 Southern California fire season runs out of time

Posted: 02 Jan 2008 11:26 PM CST

QUICK LOOK AT THE RECORD SETTING 2007 CALIFORNIA WILD LAND FIRE SEASON

CAL FIRE NEWS - Apparently the Southern California fire season truly never ends, With some seasonal wildland firefighter positions extended right into 2008, Winter aircraft maintenance deferred because the planes are still flying, Weather watches and Red Flag warnings daily, Extra crews and prepositioned strike teams away from home and working Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years shifts.

The Zaca2 fire is still not officially controlled with small inaccessible interior burns called "Smokes" still burning inside the perimeter fire officials are waiting for the winter rains to finish the job.

The fuels are still very dry, with the very few rains and dry winds always quickly re-drying the fuel.
From San Diego to Los Padres National Forest the fire season tried to slow down but never really stopped.

First came the spectacular Catalina Island Fire named the Island Fire May 10, which started just after the lunch hour and burned 4,750 acres in about five days, Destroying one home and six other buildings.

The next real news maker California wild land fire in 2007 was the Angora Fire 3,100 acres June 24th and ignited in the South Lake Tahoe area burning right up to the edge of downtown and the local high school track, Destroying 254 residences, 75 commercial structures and out buildings destroyed, 35 homes were damaged.

Then July came in with ferocity with the monster called the ZACA fire started by a couple hardworking ranch hands with a angle grinder CAL FIRE chased it off the SRA lands while protecting the structures to the southwest in the Wildland Urban interface and then the winds turned north and it went northeast right into the Los Padres National Forest.

The very rugged and mostly inaccessible Los Padres wilderness areas are Federal responsibility thereby allowing CAL FIRE to hand the fire off to United States Forest Service(USFS) by default.

Almost at the same time a series of large lighting storms passed over Northern California for a few days and ignited a whole series of fires in the far North state some of the fires in the remote wilderness areas were managed as WUF fires(Wildland Fire Use) and allowed to burn with supervision, other fires developed and merged together and were managed as a single fire called a fire complex.

One of the fire complexes was named the Inyo Complex Fire 35,176 acres started on July 6th it burned deep in the Inyo National Forest and was very stubborn, At the same time the Antelope Complex July 5th was burning in the Plumas National Forest and another 22,902 acres of heavy timber was consumed before control.
July 10 brought California the Elk Complex Fire in the Kalamath National Forest two months later when it was 90% contained at 17,684 acres in the Klamath river drainage it was allowed to burn it self out.

The first significant Malibu Canyon fire in 2007 started on July 7th and burned 815 acres before control, a few days later the China Back Complex ignited due to severe lightning from thunderstorms on July 9th and burned 2,906 acres 12 miles west of Yreka, Calif in Klamath river drainage. The same storm front also started the Fletcher fire and burned 8,121 acres 2,207 acres on the Modoc National Forest land and 4,399 acres of private land and of those acres, 1,515 acres were in Oregon.

Also because of the lightning the Colby fire 260 acres snaked around the Lassen National Forest and the Seven Eleven Complex Fire July 11th burned in the Six Rivers National Forest adding another 190 acres of heavy timber burned.

The Tar Fire August 10th in Fresno County was declared controlled on August 17 at 5,644 acres.

The ZACA Fire was still burning further south and resisting containment in the inaccessible terrain was nearing 100,000 acres with no containment date in sight and now renamed the ZACA 2 when it threatened State responsibility lands again and a unified command was created with the corresponding huge amount of resources thrown into the battle.

At one point 110 private contract water tenders were ferrying water into the rugged, dry wilderness and during the height of the battle a courageous stand by the crews was made on state highway 33 during a wind event when firefighters held the fire to the west of the highway in area called the switchbacks chasing slop overs and keeping the fire from consuming another 100,000 acres of the Dick Smith wilderness.

August had the Nor Cal fire crews on the west face of the Sierras busy with the Snow, 80, and Italian fires all held to about a 100 acres in Timber and Chaparal.
An exception was the Lazy Fire up in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest which went to 599 acres and the Wallow Fire at 1440 acres, Started on August 27th the lightning caused Grouse Fire was holding a week later at 1,022 acres.

Near the end of August in the Klamath National Forest they began fighting the Cherry Fire held to 95 acres and out on the coast the Quien Fire was being contained at 486 acres by CAL FIRE San Benito-Monterey Unit.
That same day the Stevens Fire broke out in the Stevens Creek drainage in a very rugged, Oak and scrub land but populated urban interface filled with multi-million dollar homes, the CAL FIRE SCU Unit hit the fire hard with large wildland fire resource response including calling Tanker 910(DC-10) to make a few 12,000 gallon drops on the fire and stretching over 50,000 feet of line across the terrain before containment at 151 acres.

September started out right away on the first day of the month with The Butler fire in the San Bernardino National Forest west of Big Bear Lake which was contained quickly and held to 85 acres, The next day the North Fire 2,200 acres broke out in the Angeles National Forest.
and again on the next day September 2nd the Lick Fire started by a resident's burn barrel began burning into the rugged and dry Henry Coe State Park which had not seen a fire or public vehicle access in forty years and was finally contained at 47,760 acres becoming one of Santa Clara Counties largest historical fires.
Also on September 3rd the human caused Moonlight Fire started, Becoming plume driven it would burn 64,997 acres before containment and the Mariposa Fire another 176 acres.

September 10th the Colina Fire was fought with a unified command, CAL FIRE Riverside Unit / Riverside County Fire departments held it to 430 acres of vegetation burned, Two days later the Pine Fire in the Cleveland National Forest consumed 2,170 acres South of Pine Valley.
Two more days and the Butler 2 fire 14, 039 acres started in the San Bernardino National Forest North of Big Bear.
Then the Angel Fire 837 acres near Julian two days later.

Fuels were heating up and drying out to record low moisture levels never before recorded in California History.

Then October arrived bringing in the first Santa Ana winds of the year and perfect Firestorm conditions. Numerous vegetation fires were caught and stopped early all over the State of California during the first weeks of October with Cal FIRE sending large full wild land responses including all aircraft on the first bell and sizing them up later.
Then during the last week of October Southern California exploded in fire and soon over 500,000 people would be evacuated from the Southern California Wildland firestorms.

Beginning with the Ranch Fire 58,401 acres deep in the Angeles National Forest lands of Los Angeles County started on October 20th and which would not be 100% controlled until the middle of December. Then the next day San Diego County Ranch lands ignited in a firestorm called the Harris Fire 90,440 acres started by illegal migrants in an area just above the Mexican border Eight people were killed by the Harris Wildfire in San Diego County, which also seriously injured four firefighters and a teenage boy and consumed hundreds of homes in the rural communities along the U.S.-Mexico border east of San Diego.
That same day brought us the Canyon Fire and the Sedgewick Fire 710 acres, McCoy Fire 353 acres, Roca Fire 270 acres, October Fire 20 acres, Nightsky Fire 35 acres, Buckweed Fire 38,000 acres, Santiago Fire 28,400 acres in Orange County.

The rash of fires breaking out continued the next day with the Witch Fire 197,990 acres before she was done and Walker Fire 160 acres in San Bernardino County, The Rosa Fire 411 acres in Riverside County, Magic Fire 2,824 acres in Los Angeles County, Cajon Fire 250 acres and the Grass Valley Fire 1,247 acres burning in the San Bernardino National Forest and the Coronado Hills Fire 250 acres and Rice Fire 9,472 acres started in San Diego county.

A week later the Slide Fire 12,759 acres.

The new starts continued on the 23rd with the Poomacha Fire 49,410 acres, and Ammo Fire 21,004 acres breaking out in San Diego County.

November delivered the arson caused Malibu canyon fire called the Corral Fire 4,901 acres burned in a dense wildland urban interface chasing 14,000 Residents from their homes and destroying 53 residences this fire was apparently caused by a campfire and carelessness combined with alcohol during Red Flag conditions.

December left us in Constant Red Flag conditions, The ZACA 2 Fire perimeter held at 240,207 acres burned and never did receive any appreciable rain and it was the end of a Historic California wild land fire year.

Welcome to California Wildland Fire season 2008

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