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I got paged to a fire that was only a couple of houses away yesterday. It was a good experience for me to run a hose reel for 45 minutes while the FireHawk did the heavy lifting


Ive been right next to a helo drop, and its like a van sized slug of water hits the ground, you do not want to be under it.
Tho to be fair, when they dropped next to us, we were in a flare up, and they had just refilled at a dam, and were less than 100ft up when they saw us and came back and dropped saving us from the wind change in the gulley.
Scary and awesome at the same time.
Stay safe over there, were on high alert here at the moment too.
 
I thought moving cars with a dozer would go a bit quicker? This is why my alternate evacuation plan involves pedaling to the rodeo grounds should we have a conflagration.




Every Cat skinner's dream. I imagine that after the media was gone the operator might have kicked it up a notch or two. I would have.
 
Every Cat skinner's dream. I imagine that after the media was gone the operator might have kicked it up a notch or two. I would have.
Great minds think alike. Having only the experience of running a farm tractor, I didn't want to speak for the experienced operators. But I was thinking that.

The other thought was how many lawyers are going to try to make money from the car clearing operation?

Then, I turned on a BBC report. It looked like the highway was closed and cleared as only engines were going by. Then a guy on an ebike went by at high speed. Soon a couple of folks on bicycles went by going the other way and waved.

They needed the cat/dozers downtown also, as that was gridlock. It looked like a disaster movie evacuation.
 
They are awesome. Our lake is designated a fill lake. They fly down the lake to let everyone know to get the hell out of the way. Then they make a turn and come back up the lake filling the plane. It’s full in what seems about 30 seconds.
I've watched the single engine scoopers scoop. It is pretty cool to see. I always think of the legend of the snorkler getting scooped up and dropped on a fire. Good campfire story to tell by a lake. :)

BC fire sent a plane down near here when there were no others close enough. We invade each other during fire season, as do the fires. From what I understand, the Canadian border folks wave our crews through when the situation is dire. Hope we can keep it that way.
 
And can you tell us what Trump has to do with this?
Soul sucking exists in the Political Forum.

We are sharing our international resources, which we usually do in fire emergencies, regardless of the invasion threats being spouted about--and I'm trying to remain neutral and non-political in this forum. I think our neighbors to the north might just be a little bit angry about things being said by that individual. Yet they send crews and equipment south.

BC Fire is sending more people. That's British Columbia Fire for those of you who are not familiar with our neighbor to the north.

Meanwhile, sounds like the winds, which are the main culprit are not going to die down for a while. This is unprecedented and it is very scary to think about the recovery. Can it take place?

The straw market should be extremely lucrative if it is still used for erosion control. Landfill space? Toxic waste? And then there are the humans who have been inhaling toxic smoke. Things to think about after the fire is over.
 

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