CA-LMU-Hog??

I camped at Eagle Lake this week. They have nearly completed shaded fuel breaks on both sides of highways 36 and 44, at least 100 yards deep. That should definitely help out should they need to use those highways as line.

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LMU generally does a good job handling incidents like this.They will probably hook it tonight with favorable conditions and the copious amounts of resources they currently have.

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The private timberland tree farms on the west side of Highway 44 look like they were pre-commercial thinned about 6 years ago. Pre-commercial thinning usually takes place between 5-15 years after planting, depending on the productivity of the site. Unless an area is thinned using mastication (industrial mowing), the thinned trees are often just lopped and left onsite. The fact this area has had 6 years since thinning for the slash to break down a little bit is good news in some ways - the first year or two after thinning can have a pretty extreme fire hazard, because all of that red slash is just laying out in the sun. Still, this area is basically a desert, and thinning slash takes a long time to break down.
Here is a photo taken just after thinning.

Up until very recently, the State forest practice rules (stocking standards) anticipated high levels of mortality in reforestation, and required landowners to plant 300 trees per acre (about 12 foot spacing) on harvested lands, making this kind of thinning necessary. Recently, [the stocking standards have been revised] down to 125 trees per acre on higher-site timberland (https://bof.fire.ca.gov/media/9335/2-rule-text-ada.docx), and this will reduce the amount of thinning slash fuel loading in the coming decades, but we’ll still have to deal with elevated flammability in large areas of thinned plantations for another decade while all of the stands planted in the past 10 years come into thinning age.
Also, it used to be standard practice to burn clearcuts after harvest, reducing slash loads to zero, but liability concerns and air quality regulations have pretty much shut down burning on industrial timberlands.

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The lid is coming off the pot.
A lot of the settled smoke has lifted out in the past hour and SW flow is back in charge.


http://www.alertwildfire.org/shastamodoc/index.html?camera=Axis-DyerMtn1&v=81e002f

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650 Acres 5% Contained.

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The 15 min loop is pretty telling

View From Westwood 15951884599423791950353799335441

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Is there a map of the fire?

Fire jumped 44 making a heavy push.

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Can you tell me which direction from the 44? Have property up there but not there right now.

Good scanner link? Lassen Susanville doesn’t have much

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It probably jumped ‘the 44’ just east of Hog Lake. Look at the smoke column and that’s the way it’s headed. I’m not sure anybody on this page can give you a definitive answer on the true direction.

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There are updates here:

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Still no decent feeds for this?

I’m sure a team will be ordered

I’ve hunted and can’t find any.

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This guy has some good photos from last night and has tried a couple live streams today. Those videos are super short but his content might get better.

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Hog has been “laying down” a bit for the past hour but suddenly went nuclear. Firing ops? Dunno.

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Current view from Pegleg Lookout.


Multiple spots across Highway 44 on north side of fire, unable to drop fixed wing due to smoke.

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