American Wildfires

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Fuck yeah, thanks for posting this. Our food situation is absolute shit from top to bottom. It's significant slice of the pie as to why I'd like to leave the US.
We leave 40% of our crops rotting in the fields mainly because of cosmetic issues. Just with celery they take just the heart even though the rest is perfectly good. That's just one example of many.

"What most people don’t know is that when you buy something perfectly cut and trimmed, the rest of the plant is cut off and left in the field, releasing harmful greenhouse gases into the environment. Shockingly, these practices cause over 60% of all romaine in the U.S. to be wasted on farms and over 40% of celery, just to name a few."

 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Reminder of Pompeii.

That's why they pull back and they should. Those firefighters are braver than shit and will put themselves in danger if we let them. Lessons have been learned over the years as the fires become more intense and unpredictable.

Get the fuck out and let it burn. Don't lose any lives.

Many lessons were learned from this tragic incident.



I talked to a friend the other day and they have their "Go Bag" ready and a camper loaded up with personal items ready to go. They don't have anything to worry about right now but are about 20 miles from the Hog Creek Fire that looks to be contained. At least for now. But with all the yahoos out on all the roads and trails in the coast range it's just a matter of time before some idiot starts a fire. It's bone dry and the terrain is rather difficult as anyone that's been in the area knows.

At least they have access to water for aerial drops.

 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Looks like a chaparral fire to me. ;-)
sagebrush

Cheat grass, an invasive weed that is taking over dry lands in the west is better adapted to short intervals between wildfire. So this may be the last time desert sage grows in that area. Cheat grass is low value feedstock and feeds fewer cattle per acre than native dryland plants would. Oh well. Maybe I should be content with the soylent green I got from the grocery store yesterday.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Civil unrest in Iran over water shortages, farm animals are dying and rolling blackouts because of low water in dam reservoirs, water is being trucked into many villages. This is just the beginning of the new norm for many parts of the world, wild fires everywhere.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Civil unrest in Iran over water shortages, farm animals are dying and rolling blackouts because of low water in dam reservoirs, water is being trucked into many villages. This is just the beginning of the new norm for many parts of the world, wild fires everywhere.
At the rate they are going they will be trucking water into CA, NV and AZ before too long.
 

Porky1982

Well-Known Member
Some pics of the 2020 fires we had in Oz. The 2nd biggest fires ever recorded anywhere on earth ever. Caused buy climate changes effects of 5 years of not enough rain. This will only get worse unless we do something about it!! IMG_2560.jpg IMG_2563.jpg IMG_2570.jpg
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
From fire to flood...
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Monsoon rains could bust exceptional drought across the Southwest

CNN —
A surge of monsoonal moisture is bringing rounds of heavy rain and strong thunderstorms to areas of the Southwest that are currently suffering from extreme to exceptional drought conditions.

Nearly 10 million people are under flash flood watches across Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah.

While expansive rain and thunderstorms will affect much of the Southwest this weekend, the highest rainfall totals are expected across the state of Arizona where some locations could tally upwards of 6 inches. This amount of rain in such a short period of time have prompted significant flash flooding concerns.
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