CA-BTU-Dixie?

From the Causeway

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Damn those are some impressive pics, thanks!

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20210722_195625

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Fly Fire

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5 posts were merged into an existing topic: Evacuation warning vs order??

As a side note Tornado, one of the things we can do and have done in the past is split topics such as Dixie Evac Warnings into it’s own thread using the same naming convention. Here’s a sample of what that might look like: CA-BTU-Dixie Evacuation Warnings/Orders Discussion??

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We used that process in 2020 for the Lake Fire as there were a ton of photos coming in, which while very valuable became quite congestive to the incident information coming in so we broke it off into it’s own category and discussion

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theres another start, 2.5 miles NW of round valley res

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Just… WOW! This is 11:00PM!

Also for those who haven’t checked out this feed, the Alert Wildfire cams in the upper corners are streaming live (not the typical refresh) streams of whatever cam they’ve selected.

Good stuff!

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that is roughly 6 miles west of greenville


image at 0520 am

0525

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Somebody woke up grumpy :rofl:

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Anybody got the YouTube channel for this mornings briefing

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IR Maps - 7/23/21, 02:30 hrs. White lines show 24 hr spread increments.
The company I work for, Deer Creek Resources, has spent the past 2 years studying landscape-scale wildfire hazards and prioritizing fuels projects across the South Lassen Watershed Area and we just finished our final report in May. I grew up in Westwood and live in Chico, so this fire is burning a huge chunk of the land I know best {gulp}.


Fire is backing slowly toward Meadow Valley on the east side. Biggest run on this side was 1.5 miles, around Bald Eagle Mtn. Near Silver Lake, fire spread on average, about half a mile.
Fly Fire, starting at 5pm on 7/22/21 was 4 miles long by 2:30 am 6/23/21. It looks like it slowed down in the middle of the night - capped with smoke on the webcam at 07:30.

The fire that started as a spot above Twain has grown to 9,000 acres. It had run 7 miles and there was a spot fire 2.75 miles out in front of it, west of Round Valley Reservoir, by 2:30 am on 7/23/21.

I am somewhat concerned the fire will spot over Highway 89 between Canyondam and Greenville. The highway is not in a good tactical location, and there aren’t many good places for a major fireline in the Wolf Creek drainage. If the fire becomes established over 89, there is a good chance it will run to the top of Keddie Ridge - still 6 miles north of the spot fire. Westwood is another 6 miles past Keddie Ridge, and we’d probably see the fire getting stopped on the south shore of Mountain Meadows Reservoir, which has good access.

There top of Keddie Ridge has good access to the west of Keddie Peak, but turns to rock at the end of the road, and spotting would likely carry fire over any ridgetop firelines.


The 2:30 IR caught a firing operation at the toe of the salvage logged areas from the 2012 Chips Fire. It appears there is a large spot across Butt Lake. This side of the fire ran 2-3 miles across most of the NW flank in past 24 hrs.

The fire was about 6 miles from Chester at 2:30am, 6/23/21.

Spot fires across Humboldt Road are a big deal if they don’t pick them up. About a mile west of the Humboldt Road spot is the beginning of the Butt Mountain Roadless Area. Most of this area has never been logged, and there is no mapped large fire history in here for past century.

You can see the roadless area boundaries and lack of logging on this satellite imagery showing forest canopy cover. (Data from California Forest Observatory).
If they can’t hold the NW flank of the fire at Humboldt Road and it gets established in the roadless areas, it’s possible it could burn all the way to Highway 36 and Highway 32.

There has been a lot of thinning done along the Highway 36 corridor in past 30 years, hopefully this makes for a good spot to stop the fire if it progresses this far. As we have seen in past few days, though, we are having a hard time stopping this fire when long-range spotting renders our airtankers and dozers ineffective.

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They had it blocked

Click “Watch on YouTube”, should work.

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t’s the morning of July 23 and the greater portion of Plumas County is under some sort of evacuation order or warning.

A steady parade of cars made its way along Highway 70 as the evacuation warnings crept their way through Indian Valley and then up the Canyon to Quincy, where, as of this morning all of west Quincy is under an evacuation advisory due to the Fly Fire, which broke out late yesterday afternoon in Butterfly Valley.

Information from this morning’s briefing:
Dixie Fire West Zone: The Dixie Fire remained active overnight with active surface fire and multiple tree torching with long range spotting and rollout. The fire is going to continue to move North and Northeast with the potential for 2-3 miles of new growth. The fire is burning in a remote area with limited access, extended travel times and steep terrain which hampers control efforts. Fire will continue to rapidly expand causing a need for the critical
resources to control the fires spread.
Dixie Fire East Zone: Yesterday crews made good progress along the southeast edge of the Dixie Fire toward Bucks Lake. Today, if conditions are favorable a firing operation is planned to tie the existing fireline into the west shoreline. The intent of this operation is to keep the fire north of Bucks Lake.
Firefighters will also address the Fly Fire, a new start just north of Keddie. The Fly Fire ignited yesterday evening in Butterfly Valley and burned quickly to the northeast across Hwy 89/70, growing to well over 1,650 acres. The cause is under investigation. The extreme fire behavior and long range spotting of both fires prompted several additional evacuation orders and warnings. The fires are expected to continue moving to the northeast today. Fire behavior is expected to remain extreme.
Last evening it was reported that the fire has progressed past Humbug, and crews are looking are now looking at Humboldt Road to halt the fire. The fire as reached Butt Lake, but it’s holding on the shoreline. Some spot fires were quickly accessed.
Elsewhere on the fire, the community of Twain got a spot fire yesterday. Fire behavior modeling continues to travel and have short-range spotting and now is very near where the Caribou transmission lines come down. Quincy residents were alerted last night that they should be prepared to lose power, and it could be out for some time.

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We got the evac warning last evening, N side of Hwy 36, just west of the St Bernard Lodge. Hope we don’t lose the place (Hubby had heart attack in midst of our property clean-up, quadruple bypass, still in recovery phase, so have finished making fire safe) Hubby says, well, if we lose it, we’ll rebuild and this time make 2-store w/actual garage lol
Stay safe everybody … this is a scary one!

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