I received intel that both the tower logbooks and Osborne finder from Keller Peak were evacuated before the tower was closed.
Good news indeed.
Good thinking
Updated Firis map?
How far away from Angelus oaks , is it holding behind constance peak thanks appreciate any update
Thank you appreciate it
A newer perimeter not available. Ship is oos tonight
As the Line Fire extends itself up the Bear Creek drainage, I found it sort of appropriate to liken it to the only other known significant fire to haunt in this particular part of the San Bernardino National Forest– the aptly named Bear Fire of 1970.
The burn scar makeup of the Bear and Line Fire may end up being quite similar when all is said and done despite the two fires having two very different ignition sources and being influenced by much different weather conditions:
The November 1970 Bear Fire (allegedly started by an unattended campfire three miles south of Big Bear Lake) was influenced predominantly by Santa Ana winds that propelled the fire down the Bear Creek valley and into upper Highland. At some point during its burn, the Santa Ana winds subsided and sent flames up the mountain faces and into the communities of Smiley Park and Running Springs which led to the fire destroying 52 structures. However, once the Santa Ana winds largely diminished, it appears as though fire crews got the upper hand on it quite quickly if these old newspaper clippings of the fire are anything to go by.
What does this say in relation to Line Fire? I suppose, it largely says that there is a form of being able to box this fire into valley and to keep it there in so long as there is no significant onshore flow to thrust the fireline up over and into the denser forests above the valley like what unfortunately happened in 2003 with the Old Fire.
The unfortunate reality is that the weather influence of the strong Santa Ana winds was largely in upper Big Bear and Seven Oaks’ favor. As the winds forced the Bear Fire to keep away from Pinezanita and Seven Oaks area and down into Highland.
Meanwhile, the Line Fire has had the exact opposite wind influence, as the onshore winds continue to force the fireline to creep ever so stubbornly toward Big Bear. The Bear Creek Trailhead bowl area below Highway 18 and the widely unburned land beyond the Bear scar in the Seven Oaks area is going to be the real wildcard in all this.
It’s not possible to predict EXACTLY what a fire will do but seeing what previous fires exist in an area can tell us a lot about how they’ll burn in the future.
In Handcrew speak, this is called “closing the back door” on wind events. The idea it to secure blackline/ handline construction on the lee side of the fire during the wind event so when the wind subsides and does a 180 ° back the other way you have hard containment line already cut in. We’re still about 4 weeks out from initially getting significant Foehn winds (Santa Anas) just yet.
From this morning at 0309 hrs. Still concerned with it coming up and over towards Bluff Lake. But that whole plateau has had lots of fuel reduction work over the last couple years.
It’s a jump and a skip away but forecast models are in unanimous agreement that the mountain areas are going to receive onshore wind gusts of 35-50 MPH on Monday. Temperatures will be low and humidity will be moderate so there is no critical fire threat, but it’s something to think about in regards to perimeter control.
Look like it’ll impact big bear? What are we expecting for upcoming weather effects on this fire?
I ‘think’ Big Bear is OK. Much cooler temps and higher humidity’s coming over the net few days.
LATs and a VLAT working today per Flight Radar, a small column showing through all of the haze down here on the valley floor.
Maybe there prepping to fire out the drainage while weather permits?
Is the activity picking up again?