[Note to Beth: Is there a way to put tables in the body of a post? If yes, please tell me how - I have looked around a bit for a solution - it would make posting fire statistics easier.]
Hello everyone.
I haven't posted too much on the California fires over the last several days, mostly because Hurricane Laura has become the big news item - and rightfully so.
Our California fires seem a bit of "small potatoes" as compared to this hurricane, and the damage that has been done by it - with the reality damage and hardship inflicted by this hurricane probably still to fully sink in. My heart goes out to all those affected by this storm, and my prayers for a rapid recovery. Although looking at some of the photos and videos now coming out, I fear that recovery will take a very long time indeed.
Martha, my thoughts particularly go out to you - please let us know how you have fared, whenever you are able.
Yet, although our California fires have dropped out of the headlines, and the national interest seems to have moved on from them, California fires still continue to burn. Oddly, there is a strange kind of similarity between a hurricane and a fire - a hurricane can leave nothing but rubble, a fire can leave nothing but ash.
As is normal in California for this time of year, there is no rain in sight (first rains - might - come the end of October, if we are lucky) and as the blazing sun beats down on the dry brush of our landscape, things just continue to get dryer and dryer - I have no doubt that new fires will ignite before the annual rains finally arrive.
I still have smoky skies where I live, a strong smoke smell that comes and goes, and intermittent ash fall (although the nearest large fire to me is about 40 miles). A good part of this ash consists of very small, fine particles (which is partly why it can travel so far on the winds). I went out to my car yesterday, and noticed that the dashboard, the steering wheel (and likely everything) inside my car was speckled with white ash - even though my car windows have been, and remain, tightly shut. The ash is so fine it still gets in - no point in cleaning my car with ash still falling. I keep a HEPA filter running inside my house during these times, which mostly takes care of the smoke smell and ash particles that gets inside my house. Those filters get dirty in a hurry, though.
Temperatures have "moderated" a bit over the highs (112 degrees for a few days running) of a week or so ago, temps are now "cooler" (cooler being a relative term); today in the mid-90's, looks like back up to the low 100's + by the end of the week.
Short statistics: (These are from the CalFire website, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection)
https://www.fire.ca.gov/incidents/
Acres burned (fires are still burning, so this number will go up): 1,396,076 acres
(NOTE: The entire state of Rhode Island comprises a total of 988,382 acres).
Listed below are the fires currently burning, with percentage of containment (NOTE: "Containment" does not mean the percentage of a fire that has been extinguished - it means the percentage of the fire that has a fire line constructed around it. Even a fire that is 100% "Contained" will have the "interior" of the fire (the part of the fire inside the fire line) continue to burn for days, weeks - even months (depending on the size of the fire, and the ruggedness/accessibility of the terrain over which it is burning - California has a lot of mountains and wildland - it is difficult to get to a fire in order to fight it when there are no roads in). Thus smoke and ash will continue, often for weeks, even after a fire has been "100% contained".
Thus some of these largest fires might not be totally "out" until the annual rains arrive.
I have not put in how many personnel are fighting each fire - somewhere around 13,000 - 14,000 total. Nor have I put in the number of structures burned - if there is interest, let me know and I will try to include it next time.
Current (as of 08/29/20) California Fires - as can be seen, many of the fires still have not reached any kind of containment. (NOTE: there are a great many additional fires that have burned this summer, both small and large, that have fallen off this list because they are no longer considered "active"):
SCU Lightning Complex 374,471 containment 40%
LNU Lightning Complex 373,324 containment 41%
CZU Lightning 83,335 containment 29%
Butte/Tehama 55,581 containment 32%
River Fire 48,732 containment 32%
Apple Fire 33,324 containment 95%
Lake Fire 48,732 containment 73%
Sheep Fire 29,444 containment 38%
Carmel Fire 6,767 containment 81%
Holser Fire 3,000 containment 80%
Moc Fire 2,800 containment 98%
Butte/Tehama 2,782 containment 72%
Potters Fire 930 containment 20%
Johnson fire 150 containment 0%
Coyote Fire 143 containment 80%
SQF Complex Fire 25,891 containment-unknown
Dolan Fire 25,587 containment 20%
North Complex Fire 57,478 containment 37%
Beach Fire 3,780 containment 100%
August Complex 215,588 containment 18%
Ranch 2 Fire 4,237 containment 93%
Thanks for reading.
Anne