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Post by onelasttime on Aug 5, 2021 14:15:50 GMT
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wellway
Prolific Pea
Posts: 9,073
Jun 25, 2014 20:50:09 GMT
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Post by wellway on Aug 5, 2021 14:31:47 GMT
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Post by fredfreddy44 on Aug 5, 2021 15:50:31 GMT
Greenville CA burned to the ground yesterday because of the Dixie Fire.
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 5, 2021 22:09:53 GMT
This is the same fire that burned Greenville…
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 6, 2021 14:45:03 GMT
A few short years this was the dam they didn’t know would hold as it had so much water in it from all the rain.
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 6, 2021 15:48:56 GMT
From The NY Times….
“Another Town Is Leveled by Flames”
The Dixie fire tore through the Northern California community of Greenville. Plus, interviews with firefighters battling the blaze.
The words were a stark reminder of just how brutal wildfires in California have become in recent years.
“We lost Greenville tonight.”
Representative Doug LaMalfa was bemoaning how the small Plumas County town he represents in Congress fell victim to the Dixie fire, now the sixth-largest blaze in California history. Historic buildings burned down, dozens of homes were destroyed and stretches of Greenville were left unrecognizable, my colleagues report.
The fire’s expansive growth has sadly become commonplace. Of the 10 largest wildfires ever recorded in California, six were within the past 12 months.
“They’re just spreading so fast and so hot. Sometimes we feel like we’re on our heels trying to play catch-up,” Chris Aragon, a captain with Cal Fire, the state’s fire agency, told me. “It’s not the same behavior as the fires we were used to a decade or more ago.”
Longer fire seasons and more destructive blazes have changed life not just for families worried about their safety, but also for people like Aragon who are responsible for controlling fires.
While most of us flee from flam es, the approximately 7,500 firefighters at Cal Fire run toward them, sometimes inhaling smoky air, collapsing from dehydration and working 96 hours straight.
How fires have changed
When Aragon, 36, worked as a seasonal firefighter more than a decade ago, most fires broke out between July and September, he said. The season was long if it ran through Halloween.
But the Camp fire, which destroyed the town of Paradise in 2018, began in November. And the year before, Aragon traveled to Ventura County to work on the Thomas fire, which erupted in December.
“We all wondered if we were going to make it home for Christmas,” he said.
Aragon has recently been assigned on the Dixie fire, one of about a dozen currently burning in California. The River fire, which broke out on Wednesday about 40 miles northeast of Sacramento, is uncontained and has already burned 2,400 acres, forcing thousands of evacuations.
Mike Conaty, a Cal Fire captain with the Butte Unit, said the fires his mentors told him about — the wild, once-in-a-lifetime blazes — now happen regularly.
“The last five years of my career, we’ve just blown fires like that out of the water,” Conaty told me.
There’s too much dry, dense vegetation. And the wind in recent fires has blown as fast as 100 miles per hour, “so you couldn’t drive as fast as the fire was spreading,” Aragon said.
“It sounds like a freight train is coming through, and you can’t hear anything,” he said, adding that the flames can grow so tall they block out the sun.
“In the middle of the day, it looks like it’s nighttime.”
Coughing and collapsing
The labor required to stop a fire’s path can be grueling. The firefighters alternate 24-hour shifts, typically sleeping in hotel rooms near the blaze instead of returning home.
Conaty once collapsed from dehydration after working. Aragon said he had gone 24 hours without eating, consumed with clearing brush and spraying water.
The men have grown accustomed to discomfort. The flames are often feet, if not inches, away and can feel unbearably hot. The smell of smoke lingers on their skin for days.
Firefighters wear helmets but not fitted masks, which would impede their breathing and slow them down, Aragon said. So instead they inhale smoke.
“On my first season I was coughing up black stuff for a week or so,” he said.
‘A strain on the family’
Conaty returned home last week from an 11-day stint on the Dixie fire.
He said that while his 9-year-old son was excited to see him, his 11-year-old gave him an attitude, the coping mechanism he has developed for dealing with his father being away.
“You’re kind of burning the candle at both ends most of the time,” Conaty said. “You can be as prepared as you want and as used to it as you think you are, and it’s still a strain on the family.”
Last year, during a different wildfire, Conaty was away from his wife and children for 23 days straight, able to see them only via FaceTime. As fires grow more destructive and the fire season extends further into the year, the firefighters’ schedules become less predictable.
On July 25 this year, Conaty turned 46. He couldn’t see his family because he was working on a fire, for the second year in a row.“
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 17, 2021 4:42:28 GMT
The list of fires burning in CA tonight.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 23, 2024 14:23:45 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 17, 2021 4:50:13 GMT
It's cuz Satan that you think that way..... "Shane Vaughn Says It’s ‘A Sin’ to Believe in Climate Change Right-wing pastor Shane Vaughn streamed a video last Thursday in which he declared that it is a sin for Christians to care about climate change. Alleging that nothing humans can do can affect the climate and that environmental disasters are God’s judgment for sin, Vaughn asserted that those who care about climate change have been deceived by Satan as he blasted climate scientists as “demonic demons from the cesspools of the abyss of Hell.” “Climate change is not scientific,” Vaughn said. “It is a religion. It is an anti-Christ religion that has taken over the minds of the world. In today’s lesson, I’m going to prove to you from God’s word that it is a sin to believe in the ideology and the religion of climate change.” “Satan has deceived the whole world,” he added. “If you believe that mankind is causing climate change, you’re deceived by Satan." www.rightwingwatch.org/post/shane-vaughn-says-its-a-sin-to-believe-in-climate-change/This kind of religion destroys reason and is the ruination of humanity.
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 18, 2021 3:15:11 GMT
Hey, want to spend the week at Lake Tahoe?
The sky was like that down where I live for a couple of days last fall and it was really weird to look out the window and see a sky like that. It was so dark during the day all the automatic sensor lights came on .
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 18, 2021 18:07:01 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 19, 2021 0:28:45 GMT
This fire just started earlier this afternoon and it has already damaged 50 homes.
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 19, 2021 0:30:56 GMT
Damn fires.
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 19, 2021 0:35:53 GMT
Holy shit. Read what that guy McClintock said.
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 19, 2021 0:49:51 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 30, 2021 13:40:32 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 30, 2021 13:41:55 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 30, 2021 13:43:48 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 31, 2021 3:30:19 GMT
Tonight’s reality in two parts of the country thanks to climate change…
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 23, 2024 14:23:45 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2021 8:18:33 GMT
Last year was one of the hottest summers on record in Morocco. Oddly enough, this summer has been the mildest since I have lived here the last 8 years. We have even had a couple of random rain showers. Our rainy season is in the winter (December-May)...where it rains constantly. It is extremely rare to have rain outside of that time.
Last night when DH and I went out to walk the dog, it was so cool that I had to grab a sweater. That just does not happen in August in Morocco. It gave me such an uneasy feeling.
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pinklady
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,064
Nov 14, 2016 23:47:03 GMT
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Post by pinklady on Aug 31, 2021 12:01:58 GMT
Yep, it’s real
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Post by onelasttime on Aug 31, 2021 17:35:24 GMT
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Post by onelasttime on Sept 2, 2021 18:00:28 GMT
I was watching videos of water literally rushing into subway stations thinking too bad we can’t get that water to CA and other western states.
They measured over three inches of rain in an hour in Central Park…
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Post by birukitty on Sept 2, 2021 22:21:18 GMT
We had tornadoes touch down yesterday in Annapolis, MD on West Street that caused damage and torn off the roof of a house in nearby Edgewater, MD. There was also some flooding due to the vast amounts of rain that followed.
I understand tornadoes if you live in Mississippi or Kansas or states like that but here in Annapolis, MD this is a new occurrence. At least for me. I've lived here for the past 27 years and this has just started happening here lately. Before that I lived in northern Virginia for most of my life. I believe it is due to climate change.
I can deal with hurricanes (I'm used to those), and earthquakes (been in two of those in Japan and one here in Maryland too-which by the way I also believe is due to climate change), but tornadoes scare the heck out of me. We do have a finished basement that is partially underground. I told DH today maybe we should start thinking about building a storm shelter like in "The Wizard of Oz" (half joking) and also asked him to look on our home insurance to check that we are covered for tornadoes.
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Sept 2, 2021 22:51:46 GMT
Major tornado in south New Jersey... Thinking I heard 25 house severely damaged.
Major rain in my area . I'm just high enough to avoid the running water. Across town my friend has probably lost her house. Several of her neighbors had severe foundation damages.
You bet it is climate change..
Update: her house may not be a loss.. Her DH did say he would take a buy out if offered. That's big. He was raised in the house.
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