Vagabond
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 27,080
There's a red moon in the south tonight. Stay safe everyone. ?
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Hope you stay safe. My cousins are in Santa Rosa and the last few years have been very trying.Vagabond - stay safe.
I am in Northern California in Sonoma County (about 40 minutes north of the Golden Gate Bridge)
Sonoma is famous for two things: Wine and Wild Fires. The wine is helpful during the fires.
All kidding aside. I am in my home with all my windows closed and scented candles burning.
Eyes watering. Air is horrible. I suspect riding lessons will be canceled tomorrow (not that that is important in the scheme of things). The poor horses......there is nothing they can do but breathe smoke.
PG&E seems to be responsible for this fire (and many, many others). In a cost-cutting move several years ago, PG&E stopped clearing the brush near the power lines and checking the lines to make sure they were in good shape.
The devastation is unbelievable. I suspect that PG&E has not saved any money due to the lawsuits and payouts to victims who lost everything.
I have seen many of the discovery docs and pictures. It is horrid.
Hope everyone stays safe and out of the smoke.
I can't believe that fire is still raging! This is much worse than last year when there were tons of fires in my area but every day they became a bit more contained. I don't understand why these fires aren't on the news every night like the fires last year.I have friends on evacuation standby because of the Dixie fire right now. ?
I hope it’s not because we’ve normalized the state catching fire every year.I can't believe that fire is still raging! This is much worse than last year when there were tons of fires in my area but every day they became a bit more contained. I don't understand why these fires aren't on the news every night like the fires last year.
I think it's because so few homes have been burned or threatened. That's all I can think of. Probably Afghanistan is pushing other things out of the news too. And the recall. But mostly because the nightly news can't interview endless folks who either lost their homes, lost loved ones, or are about to. They thrive on that stuff.I hope it’s not because we’ve normalized the state catching fire every year.
We’re getting smoke and ash from the Caldor Fire today.
PG&E just infuriates me. We have some of the highest electric rates in the country, but they can’t even maintain things....
Last year, we in San Francisco had three days of orange-colored sky (not the kind that Natalie Cole and Michael Bublé sing about), followed by several days of beige and weeks of unhealthy air-quality levels. So far, we haven't had anything remotely like that. ?I can't believe that fire is still raging! This is much worse than last year when there were tons of fires in my area but every day they became a bit more contained. I don't understand why these fires aren't on the news every night like the fires last year.
Oh. They must feel horrid. The smoke is worse up there.Hope you stay safe. My cousins are in Santa Rosa and the last few years have been very trying.
Yep. PGE tried to declare bankruptcy.I hope it’s not because we’ve normalized the state catching fire every year.
We’re getting smoke and ash from the Caldor Fire today.
PG&E just infuriates me. We have some of the highest electric rates in the country, but they can’t even maintain things....
Shh. We now have a Spare the Air day today and tomorrow!So far, we haven't had anything remotely like that. ?
There were about 660 homes destroyed in the Dixie Fire. Maybe they haven't been able to locate the evacuees to interview them because they keep getting re-evacuated. I'm also getting irritated by the Pollyanna types on Facebook who are all chirping, "Oh, the forest will come back better than ever!" on the fire having burned at least a third of my beloved Lassen Volcanic National Park (so far). Yeah, but not in our lifetimes. The smoke is back here so no outside walks for us. We had a short two day period of blue skies while PG&E knocked the power out, and now it's back to feeling like we live in L.A. level smog from the sixties.I think it's because so few homes have been burned or threatened. That's all I can think of. Probably Afghanistan is pushing other things out of the news too. And the recall. But mostly because the nightly news can't interview endless folks who either lost their homes, lost loved ones, or are about to. They thrive on that stuff.
Also, don't get me started on PG&E.
Yes, it destroyed a small town. But nothing like the Camp Fire which killed 85 people while no one (as of the last updating of the CA Wildfires wiki page) has died in the Dixie Fire. It also is only the 5th worse in terms of structures that have been burned.There were about 660 homes destroyed in the Dixie Fire.
I think they stopped updating the information because no more small towns have burned after the initial one, and, as you said, no one has died so far. All they can continue saying is "x number of people have to evacuate and x towns are threatened." Right now, it's just burning up forest (massive amounts, but still "just trees"It seems to be really rural and so reporters in the Bay Area aren't reporting on it extensively. But I would like to know more about it because it's still only something like 35% contained and it's been going on forever. I think they should report on it as much as they did the Camp Fire, at least.
Yeah but I'm really interested in it so I'm frustrated. ?If it gets more dramatic, I'm sure they'll pipe up.![]()
It is been extremely dry all summer. They had to close the BWCA because of the danger of smoke and fire. I am from Lake County, a gorgeous place.There are also wildfires in Minnesota. They have been suffering heat and drought as well.
Those are insane numbers. I worked as an air quality engineer for 15 years. At the worst times in the Phoenix area I never saw even red. Last year I was shocked to hear the AQI in Oregon and California. It was purple, then maroon, and occasionally off the chart. I have never seen red, purple, maroon around me. I heard people locked their windows and doors and stayed inside.From AQ Air/
AKE TAHOE, Calif. - Plumes of wildfire smoke from the massive wildfires burning in California created air quality in Lake Tahoe that is far worse than what officials consider hazardous . The Bay Area was also shrouded in smoke on Friday as officials announced a Spare the Air Alert through Saturday.
Smoke blowing from the Dixie and Caldor fires has blanketed parts of northern California and areas beyond for weeks.
Air quality technology company, IQAir, recorded some of the region's hazardous conditions on Friday. Just before noon, the air quality index for Pollock Pines, which is located in El Dorado County, reached 1038. Neighboring Camino peaked at 1117.
A score of up to 50 is considered good air quality by the U.S. Air Quality Index. Hazardous conditions start an an index of 301, which leads to a "health warning of emergency conditions." The levels recorded in Tahoe were three times greater than that.
Those are insane numbers. I worked as an air quality engineer for 15 years. At the worst times in the Phoenix area I never saw even red. Last year I was shocked to hear the AQI in Oregon and California. It was purple, then maroon, and occasionally off the chart. I have never seen red, purple, maroon around me. I heard people locked their windows and doors and stayed inside.
This year sounds even worse.
My niece and I have reservations to go to South Lake Tahoe in about two weeks. Unless a miracle clears the air to moderate (yellow) or better (green) by then, we will have to cancel. We may make the decision in a week from now. Even after the fires are contained, I can't imagine the air quality returning to normal in a short time. I remember that last year my friend in CA was wearing K95 masks for weeks.
A quick way to find the Air Quality in your area is to check www.AirNow.gov.
I have pretty much decided to cancel this trip. Could go there later when the air is clean. The particulates you don't see are more hazardous than the ones you see. The large ones are filtered out by the respiratory system. The PM2.5 go deep in the Lungs and cause damage. I am reading that the area has fires frequently? Until last year we used to hear fires from S. Cal more because they affected our air quality. The orange color sun looked beautiful though.Thanks for the info.
Not that it is my business.....but I wouldn't go up there. I am 3 hours away, and the smoke here is awful. And, it is not necessarily particles you can see. So it is not like you can look out there and say "Oh my it is smokey out there". Good luck.
I think that's good. Nothing personal to you but the people in Tahoe have said "Don't come here!" as they are really straining to have the resources to fight these fires (and treat people with CV but that's a different issue). There also might not be much to do as a lot is closed due to the fires and the smoke. They've closed most (if not all) of the parks, for example.I have pretty much decided to cancel this trip
I was wondering how Reno was doing, since it is so close to Tahoe.Yeah, the Reno-Tahoe area has been in the red zone for it seems like weeks now. The valley gets thick with smoke and I tried going up to Tahoe last week to get above it, and it's just as bad up there. There is very little break from it right now.
It is close to Tahoe, but in the valley, so we are getting it pretty thick. It's sad and miserable (although according to my computer the AQI right now is only 61, the best it's been in weeks; I'd better take the dog out for a walk quick!)I was wondering how Reno was doing, since it is so close to Tahoe.