Vaughn
Subscriber
The area inbetween my two sisters got hammered.We often get Washington State smoke up here, too.A few years ago, it was brutal!
The area inbetween my two sisters got hammered.We often get Washington State smoke up here, too.A few years ago, it was brutal!
You might thank them in person, who knows. We have several local engines/crews out of county (jargon for deployed on national fires). I don't know where they are but they might be in California.Thank you, and all rural firefighters, for your service!
When I was working there (USFS) I got dropped off with a couple others by a chopper doing a one-rail, "Out you go!" landing on a several acre lightning strike in the middle of nowhere. The smoke got bad so that the chopper could not bring out water (drinking or otherwise) and or back-up for a long while. Headwaters for a few rivers, this is up or down country...and that is true all down the coastal mountains.
Looks like politics again I'll let you off this this time Vaughn as in this thread it appears to be your first offenceNot to mention that almost 60% of CA forest land is under federal ownership. US Forest Service is greatly underfunded. The number of USFS fire fighters and fire stations has dropped tremendously.
Thanks for your help.We know things are bad when the USA officially requests for our fire fighters to head there to help. We've done it before and it will probably happen this time as well.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-08...-firefighting-support-from-australia/12585806
Mick.
Is it true that they won't let the power companies clear the underbrush out from under the power lines there?
Just the facts, sir! I left the Forest Service in 1991 -- funds for recreation were drying up (including trail work), I was being trained up as a crew boss (leading 20 firefighters into the fire) and things were not looking good. Other reasons too, but when the opportunity to run a university darkroom appeared, I jumped ship.Looks like politics again I'll let you off this this time Vaughn as in this thread it appears to be your first offence
pentaxuser
That sounds political. Be careful.Just the facts, sir! I left the Forest Service in 1991 -- funds for recreation were drying up (including trail work), I was being trained up as a crew boss (leading 20 firefighters into the fire) and things were not looking good. Other reasons too, but when the opportunity to run a university darkroom appeared, I jumped ship.
I went backpacking out of my old station a couple summers ago with one of my boys. The fire station on the way up were closed down, no road work for awhile, little to no work done on the trails in many years. Actually the wilderness is a lot more wild now.
Very little. Only a small strip is under forest land control (see green area). There are some military bases. (blue area) But 99% is under NJ state control. Most Federal lands are out west and in Alaska..Are 60% of the forest land of NJ managed by the Federal Gov't, too?
I know that, Alan, having worked for the USFS for 12 years in California...it was a bit satirical. I visited my old stomping grounds (Mendocino National Forest) with one of my boys in 2018. The small, one-engine stations were no longer staffed. Road work, which includes brushing and fuel removal along roadsides as firebreaks and safe avenues of travel, had not been done in years. Plantations of conifers were not thinned. As a large part of the August Complex, the largest fire in CA recorded history, this area is now toast...840,000 acres, 30% contained.
Federal (and State) policy and budgeting has just as much affect on our present fires as do global warming, drought and insect kills.
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