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This is how the world ends
I live in Northern California, between Sacramento and Chico where the big fire is. The fire is about seventy or eighty miles from us. The fire started eight days ago, is the most destructive and deadly fire on record, six hundred people are still listed as missing, and the fire is only 40% contained.
Our entire area is covered with smoke. It's horrible. School has been canceled for everyone in the region, over a million students. On the air quality index anything over 100 is considered very bad. Right now where I am it's 167. Yesterday afternoon it was 467. I replace our air filters every time the season changes, four times a year... We just did it in September. I pulled our air filter now and it's nasty. The impact on our area is staggering. Everyone knows someone who has lost a house, the hotels are booked solid, they have no money, no food, no clothes. We are scrambling to host a thanksgiving dinner for a thousand people. Last night I was at the firehouse for our yearly charity turkey drive, and we collected 1600 turkeys - twice as many as last year. This is how the world will end. There will be a fire, it will get out of control, we will be unable to stop it, and it will block out the sun for months.... |
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the homes are rich a holes... you don't fuck with nature. reminds me of the idiots here that built their homes in a dry wash... and we had record floods clean their shit out. not the end of the world! drama queen!
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Rochard, why do people live in wildfire prone areas?
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I'm guessing he doesn't understand. |
Found this interesting article :
"Why Does California Have So Many Wildfires?" https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/09/c...nia-fires.html |
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First off all, we are in a drought. It just hasn't been raining. It's super dry here. When I first moved here in 1989, it was beautiful. Everything was green. Now.... Everything is brown. It's all nothing but kindling at this point. Second... Once a fire starts they can't get to it. We have the Rockies here and when a fire starts there is just not enough roads to get it. This fire started at 6:30 in the morning, by 9am it was too late. I am seventy miles away... The first started at 6:30, and by 10am local fire departments met up here in Lincoln just a block from my house to up to the fire. That's how quickly they put out the word for help. Here in California we have local fire departments, and also the State department called Cal Fire. But when a big fire happens they call for support from across the state, and then from other states. This also greatly taxes our little fire department.... We have three fire stations and three teams on duty at any given time. When they send out a team to a big fire they are gone for five or six days at a time... That's like taking 20% of our staff for an entire week. |
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The world is not just California Richard.. :upsidedow
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external fire sprinklers...the world is saved...
https://mediaassets.thedenverchannel....0_900_675.jpg |
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What Richard Doesn't Understand Is... Oh, And He Was Also In The Marines . |
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https://www.actionnewsnow.com/conten...500328221.html |
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Oh wait |
This will have an impact later on. Stronger weather systems coming next.
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Ask anyone on the fire line, California is being mismanaged
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Sierra Nevada |
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https://images.rockchucksummit.com/w...49-750x430.jpg |
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