Deadwood 1 & 2 Time lapse of collapse
Outstanding visual of effects
Deadwood 1 & 2 Time lapse of collapse
Outstanding visual of effects
The map gives you an idea of the tree Mortality In the region.
The hippus-lipidii! Welcome Mike!
Has the fire made it to the Shaver Point area yet? We have a cabin there and no way of knowing what’s going on.
I don’t know. Not in the area, and with such a huge plume on the fire overnight, it is hard for me to know how accurate the satellite heat detections are. At 3am, it was on the edge of the heat detections, but it is in the zone I would throw out as suspect without confirmation.
I just talked to my friend who lives up there she said they have already evacuated Shaker Lake area, she’s closer down by Auberry and they have not evacuated there just yet. I hope your home is okay.
I live top of the four lane. We are under warning to evacuate but no mandatory yet
East winds Mon/Tuesday should clear smoke in NCAL for a little bit. Could be it crates more issues later in the week. Dry cold front moving down from the north.
That “spot” off to the west looks pretty suspicious to me. My guess this morning was the “western spot” is about 450 acres.
I did a screen recording.
That spot is being called the peckinpah fire because of the distance but it is a spot fire.
That sir is scary!
if you look at one yesterdays video posts you will see it at the left of the screen. Even at that distance, reported 10 miles, the spot was being drawn beck to the main fire. Than is scary!
Now that’s some long range spotting and then the picture of the bark that was being thrown that distance.
Will the lack of clean-up before make this burn so hot as to “sterilize” the soil ?
I’ve been wondering about the “Spot” fire - could have simply been a “clear-air” lightning strike off the column?
Just a thought… May as well throw in yet another crazy thing for the boots to consider with what seems to be quickly becoming the new norm.
Remember back when a few thousand acres was a big deal?
Ugh…
I’ve seen really erratic fire behavior based on large bodies of water and their influence on local weather. My father calls it “the lake effect”. Sudden wind shifts in the afternoon with instability causing extreme fire behavior and sudden wind shifts with fire tornados around the areas of the lake(s). I think Shaver Lake will do this today.
Lake effect mixed with the effects of heat on granite. Perfect storm condition
We saw a lot of ‘spot fires’ in the Salmon River complexes of 2014 that were caused by lightning from massive columns. But I have also seen a smouldering piece of lodgepole bark the size of a skateboard fall onto a briefing 12 miles downwind of a huge column in Central Idaho.