MandysMom wrote:Good morning all.
What I read repeatedly about the Dixie fire, is, PG&E got a signal that a transformer was out. Sent a worker, who found a tree has fallen into pole with transformer, and was leaning against it with a small fire at the base. He immediately called it in, only to be told the fire crew was on the way. Is it PG&Es fault a tree fell? Depends on how much line clearing they had done, which I know they have been doing (have seen the videos).
Hrm. I have not read that was a transformer, but was rather a blown fuse, that is, it was actually three blown fuses.
Here is a paragraph from
"PGE Incident Report 20210713" filed by PG&E with the California Public Utilities Commission. (the report is in .pdf, link to this report can be found on the California Public Utilities Commission website at
https://www.cpuc.ca.gov/search#q=dixie%20fire&sort=relevancy):
Summary: On July 13, 2021 at approximately 0700 hours, PG&E's outage system indicated that Cresta Dam off of Highway 70 in the Feather River Canyon lost power. The responding PG&E troubleman observed from a distance what he thought was a blown fuse on the PG&E Bucks Creek 1101 12kV Overhead Distribution Circuit uphill from his location. Due to the challenging terrain and road work resulting in a bridge closure, he was not able to reach the pole with the fuse until approximately 1640 hours. There he observed two of three fuses blown and what appeared to him to be a healthy green tree leaning into the Bucks Creek 1101 12 kV conductor, which was still intact and suspended on the poles. He also observed a fire on the ground near the base of the tree. The troubleman manually removed the third fuse and reported the fire, his supervisor called 9-1-1, and the 9-1-1 operator replied they were aware of the fire and responding. CAL FIRE air support arrived on scene by approximately 1730 hours and began dropping fire retardant and water. There is more to this report, if anyone is interested, check under the link above.
MandysMom wrote:The fire is moving North East, and Paradise is West of the fire, so unlikely to hurt Paradise again, and lots of burn scar (reduced or no trees or undergrowth) to act as barrier in between.
Paradise is still under some amount of threat risk. Part of the fire in an area near Buck’s Lake seems to have turned a bit, and is perhaps again moving south and slightly west - this remains to be seen. The small town of Pulga, the place in the Feather River Canyon where the Paradise fire began, is currently under "Evacuation Warning", even though it was pretty much burned over during the Paradise fire.
Here is the current evacuation map – Pulga is in the left-hand yellow area, at bottom right (enlarge the map to see Pulga) Paradise is directly to the left of Pulga on this map. The bottom of the Evacuation Warning area covering the town of Magalia (which also burned during the Paradise fire) abuts the town of Paradise.
https://buttecountygis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=9c92e0a2d2e0415fa5248d70cd644a82It has been three years since the Paradise fire - Manzanita, an extremely flammable native shrub, is native to the Paradise area, there is a lot of it up there. Manzanita can grow up to about a foot a year. Even though much of the Paradise area was burned to the ground, manzanita is one of the California plants that needs fire to germinate, so although it was thoroughly burned over, three years later there is likely (due to fire germination) a plethora of young 2 or 3 foot tall manzanita shrubs growing thickly mashed together, as they tend to do - along with a lot of dry grass and remaining trees – just waiting to burn again.
MandysMom wrote:Paradise is busy rebuilding, and has housing shortages. I don't know why the woman would have trouble selling the house when there is a massive housing shortage all over CA including ESP Paradise, since 10,000 buildings burned.
Living where I do, I talk to a lot of people, so I might have an inkling as to the why of it.
I belong to a rock club that traditionally draws members from around a wide area – primarily from Paradise, Oroville, Cherokee and points south. This is how that I personally know four different families that were burned out in the Paradise fire. All of these people I know have told me forcefully and unequivocally that they will never live in Paradise ever again (one of these is a woman whose son died in the fire).
Why? Because, as noted above, grass, brush and trees grow back and it is a constant battle to keep new and fast-growing underbrush in check. And, even if one keeps their own property cleared (a never-ending battle), what if your neighbor refuses to? Paradise had – at least partially – burned before the 2018 fire. It will undoubtedly burn again.
One of the issues responsible for the deaths of the 86 victims of this fire is that Paradise is built on a wide ridge above the Feather River Canyon. The 3 roads in and out are each only two-lane, narrow and in many places very twisty (if I recall, one of these 3 was blocked by fire at the time, so was impassable). I have driven to Paradise many times, it is not too far from me; I know the area well (there are many ancient volcanic features in the area, if one knows where to look - I enjoy looking for them).
The pre-fire population of Paradise was an estimated 26,800. When everyone hit the narrow roads at the same time to escape being burned alive, it was instant gridlock, as can be seen from many videos posted to YouTube at the time.
But I suppose that, as time goes by, people forget. Especially as the great many who experienced the terror and tragedy of those days first-hand are no longer there, so are unavailable to share their memories with any new people coming in.
MandysMom wrote:Salton Sea has had periods in history where it dried up completely. For over half a century, It was fed by farmer run off, and became contaminated further, and now between drought and more efficient water use, it's going dry again. Man made ineterference strikes again!
The Salton Sea is not a natural “sea” at all, but rather a man-made lake (although the making of it was allegedly accidental). Historically, it was a dry lake bed. Since the creation of the “Salton Sea” in 1907 (before that it didn't exist) I find no reference that it has ever since gone dry; geologically speaking it was probably once part of an inland sea, an extension of the Gulf of California, which is located (I mention this for our out-of-California members) between the Baja California peninsula and Mexico.
Here is a document, from the University of California San Diego, explaining the history of the Salton Sea, should anyone be interested. This document was produced by the university in 2005; it is fascinating to note that many of the predictions made in this document back in 2005 have come to pass in 2021.
http://saltonsea.sdsu.edu/MandysMom wrote:Starting late Thursday we began to have smoke from up north, from various fires. So far it's not too bad, but can quickly get worse depending on winds. I try to stay in with my AC with its two types filtration , because we have both heat (today another 100 degree plus day) and smoke to contend with.
I am having a bit of smoke overcast here at my house today, which has the odd benefit (?) of holding the temps down a bit. I don’t smell smoke, or see wafting smoke in the air – but there is definite smoke overcast in the sky.
Stay safe, everyone.
Anne