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Actualizacion Diaria Incendio Cedar Creek, Septiembre 30, 2022 (Cedar Creek Fire Wildfire)
Resumen del Incendio Cedar CreekExtensión: 120,546 acres | Contenido 27% | Fecha de Inicio: 1ro agosto, 2022 | Origen: 15 miles Este de Oakridge, OR | Causa: Relampagos | Personal: 1,252 | Recursos: 33 camión de bomberos; 26 Cuerpos bomberos; 27 Maquinaria pesada; 9 helicop. 16 USC § 551 and 18 U.S.C §§ 3551, 3559, 3571, and 3581. Condiciones climáticas: Una tendencia del clima significativamente caliente y seca se presentará a partir del viernes con ráfagas de vientos provenientes del Este y afectando el área del incendio. Se espera un clima presentando brisas calientes y secas a partir del viernes permaneciendo el fin de semana con las posibilidades de presentar una combinación pesada de viento y baja humedad para el sábado. Cierres de caminos: Los Bosques Nacionales de Deschutes y Willamette, han dictado ordenes de cierres de camino. Algunas de estas áreas permanecerán cerradas hasta que se haya realizado un estudio del peligro en las zonas que han...
Goat Rocks Fire Update for September 30, 2022 (Goat Rocks Fire Wildfire)
Cool temperatures and light precipitation had a calming affect on the Goat Rocks Fire yesterday. Although most precipitation didn’t make it past the tree canopies, higher humidity was absorbed into finer fuels like brush and small sticks. Large logs and stumps continued to burn, but with less intensity. The fire produced less smoke and did not spread. Today, fire activity will continue to be moderated by residual moisture in the air and in fuels. Temperatures are expected to rise into the 70s, with clearing skies. Warmer, drier air will start to move into the area again tomorrow, with winds from the east developing. High temperatures are expected to be around 80 degrees Monday and Tuesday. Ahead of this warm, dry weather, fire personnel are working to secure indirect containment lines. Most of these lines are being developed along existing roads where there is already a break in the fuels: the road. The objective is to remove enough trees and brush along lines that fire will...
BAER Team Begins Post-Fire Assessment of Bolt Creek and other MBS Fires (Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie Post-Fire BAER Burned Area Emergency Response)
BAER Team Begins Post-Fire Assessment of Bolt Creek Fire near Skykomish, and Boulder Lake, Lake Toketie and Suiattle River Fires near DarringtonA Forest Service Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) team has been established by the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest (MBSNF) to begin post-fire burned area assessments of the Bolt Creek Fire and other wildfires near Darrington that have recently burned on Forest Service federal lands, and private lands. The BAER team leader is Joe Blanchard, Forest Service Watershed Program Manager. Forest Service BAER team assessments typically take approximately two weeks to complete. BAER teams coordinate with tribal nations, the Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR), National Weather Service (NWS), US Geological Survey (USGS), and other federal, state, and local agencies as they assess potential post-fire impacts to the burned watersheds. BAER surveys are rapid assessments that evaluate the burned area to identify watersheds having...
Kalama Fire Update Sept. 30, 2022 (Kalama Fire Wildfire)
Kalama Fire Update – Sept. 30, 2022Overview: The Kalama Fire, located southeast of Kalama Horse Camp on the south side of Mount St. Helens, is at approximately 435 acres in size and is currently five percent contained. Acres increased only slightly with burn out operations to assist in securing the perimeter of the fire. Cooler weather and rain over the fire area these past few days has assisted in the firefighting efforts. Fire Behavior: The fire was located on a cliff and is now burning on extremely steep ground. Fire fighters are preparing indirect lines in more favorable terrain where they can be successful. Fire behavior has been smoldering and creeping with some torching observed. The potential for fire growth remains and containment lines are being put in place. Weather: Weather today is predicted to be drier and warmer then the past few days. A surface thermal trough will push up from the south, creating northerly flow with warmer and drier weather. Tonight, the...
9/30/22 Bolt Creek Fire Morning Update (Bolt Creek Fire Wildfire)
Bolt Creek Fire Update September 30, 2022 Western Washington Incident Management Team 3Incident Commander: Kent Stanford Resources: 175 personnel – One hotshot crew, two type-2 initial attack hand crews, two hand crews, one helicopter, 13 engines, one dozer, one water tender and 78 overhead. US 2 Has Reopened: US 2 has reopened from mile marker 46-49. Crews are still working in the area so please drive at the posted reduced speeds through the fire area.Fire Update: Fire resources, utility crews and WSDOT finalized work along the US 2 closure area on Thursday and the road was reopened on Thursday evening. Two days of moderated fire conditions contributed to mostly minimal fire spread from Wednesday through Thursday night, though the fire has continued to burn up to containment lines on the west, south and east edges of the fire. Very few pockets of unburned vegetation remain along the road, and most of the fire’s continued spread will be to the north and into the Wild Sky...
Cedar Creek Fire Update September 30, 2022 (Cedar Creek Fire Wildfire)
Cedar Creek FireSeptember 30, 2022 | Update 8:30 AM | Size: 120,546 acres | Contained: 27% | Start Date: August 1, 2022 | Origin: 15 miles east of Oakridge, OR | Cause: Lightning | Total personnel: 1,252 | Resources: 33 engines; 26 crews; 27 heavy equipment; 9 helicopters West Zone Operations: Work continued yesterday to secure fire perimeter nearest to the communities of Oakridge, Westfir, and High Prairie ahead of anticipated weather that could challenge containment lines. A taskforce of engines, crews, and equipment will be arriving ahead of a new weather system pushing in from the east to aid in this work and reinforce containment lines along the southwestern edge. With the change in weather, smoke is expected to impact surrounding communities beginning today and continue over the next few days. As containment increases, efforts will be shifted toward assessing damage from the fire and repair work across the fire area. Many areas must be cleared of hazards...
US 2 Has Reopened (Bolt Creek Fire Wildfire)
US 2 has reopened from mile marker 46 to 49. Please drive at reduced speeds as crews will be continuing work in these
Understanding Soil Burn Severity (Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie Post-Fire BAER Burned Area Emergency Response)
We often think of wildfire burn severity in terms of the visual impacts above the ground. Yet, the post-fire landscape response (erosion, flooding, and mass movement) is more strongly correlated to soil burn severity. The BAER team starts by looking at the vegetation to understand conditions and characterize soil burn severity. Then, the team’s watershed specialists (soil scientists, hydrologists, and geologists) ground-truth different vegetation burn intensities to tease out patterns of how fire affected and changed soil properties. Pre-fire ground cover, forest type, fire behavior, slope, aspect, and other factors all influence soil burn severity. After collecting field observations, the team adjusts the vegetation severity map to create the soil burn severity (SBS) map, using four classes: unburned (green), low severity (blue), moderate severity (yellow), and high severity (red). What do these classifications mean?LOW severity areas generally have intact and recognizable...
All Evacuations Reduced to Level 1 (Ready) (Bolt Creek Fire Wildfire)
Effective Thursday, Sept. 29 at 7 p.m.EVACUATION LEVEL CHANGES – Due to the current reduction in fire danger, all evacuation levels are at Level 1 (Ready). This still means residents should be ready to evacuate if conditions change.Level 1 (Ready): Index – No change.Level 1 (Ready): South of U.S. 2 near Index, including Index Estates and the Lake Serene Trailhead. No change.No other evacuation guidance for occupied areas of Snohomish County.Level 1 (Ready): Baring and Grotto and areas along U.S. 2 east to the Money Creek tunnel. Was Level 2 (Set).Level 1 (Ready): From west side of Money Creek tunnel to milepost 48, plus FS Road 65 (Beckler River Road). Was Level 3 (Go).Level 1 (Ready): Skykomish – Was Level 2 (Set).Level 1 (Ready): East of Skykomish, from the Beckler River to Forest Service Road 66, north and south of U.S. 2 including Foss River Road. No change.Residents in the area should remain vigilant. Conditions could change quickly, and evacuations may again become...
Burned Area Emergency Response Limitations (Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie Post-Fire BAER Burned Area Emergency Response)
Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) LimitationsWhile many wildfires cause minimal damage to the land and pose few threats to the land or people downstream, some fires result in damage that requires special efforts to reduce impacts afterwards. Loss of vegetation exposes soil to erosion; water run-off may increase and cause flooding, soil and rock may move downstream and damage property or fill reservoirs putting community water supplies and endangered species at-risk.The Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) program is designed to identify and manage potential risks to resources on National Forest System lands and reduce these threats through appropriate emergency measures to protect human life and safety, property, and critical natural or cultural resources. BAER is an emergency program for stabilization work that involves time-critical activities to be completed before the first damaging storm event to meet program objectives.BAER Objectives:Determine whether imminent...
Key Elements of BAER Assessment (Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie Post-Fire BAER Burned Area Emergency Response)
KEY ELEMENTS OF A BAER ASSESSMENTForest Service BAER assessment teams are established by Forest Supervisors before wildfires are fully contained. The teams coordinate and work with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS), National Weather Service (NWS), local counties, State Department of Transportation, and other federal, state, and local agencies to strategically assess potential post-fire impacts to the watersheds burned from wildland fires.The BAER assessment teams are evaluating watershed conditions to determine the level of potential risks to human life, safety, property, critical natural and cultural-heritage resources, and determine if there are appropriate and effective emergency stabilization measures that can be implemented on federal lands in a timely manner to reduce unacceptable risks from potential flooding and debris flow threats.The BAER assessment team conducts field surveys...
Goat Mountain 2 Fire Update-09/29/2022 (Goat Mountain 2 Fire Wildfire)
Double Creek, Sturgill, Nebo, Goat Mountain Two FiresSeptember 29, 2022Daily Update – 8:00 AMHighlights: Yesterday saw an increase in fire behavior across the fires. Today crews will assess those active fire areas and resources stand ready to respond to any changes. Overnight precipitation and more moisture today should substantially reduce fire activity.Double Creek Fire: 161,510 acres, no change | 89% contained | 436 personnel assignedThe northern region was very active yesterday in the Cow Creek and Lightning Creek drainages. The northern portion received wetting rains overnight, and crews will assess fuel conditions in those areas today to determine resource needs for the next few days. Along the western side of the fire, suppression repair is nearly complete.Eagle Cap Wilderness Fires Sturgill Fire: 21,103 acres, no change | 72% of objectives achieved | 60 personnel assignedThe fire was very active yesterday and burned towards the Stanley Guard Station. Helicopters dropped...
Nebo Fire Update-09/29-2022 (Nebo Fire Wildfire)
Double Creek, Sturgill, Nebo, Goat Mountain Two FiresSeptember 29, 2022Daily Update – 8:00 AMHighlights: Yesterday saw an increase in fire behavior across the fires. Today crews will assess those active fire areas and resources stand ready to respond to any changes. Overnight precipitation and more moisture today should substantially reduce fire activity.Double Creek Fire: 161,510 acres, no change | 89% contained | 436 personnel assignedThe northern region was very active yesterday in the Cow Creek and Lightning Creek drainages. The northern portion received wetting rains overnight, and crews will assess fuel conditions in those areas today to determine resource needs for the next few days. Along the western side of the fire, suppression repair is nearly complete.Eagle Cap Wilderness Fires Sturgill Fire: 21,103 acres, no change | 72% of objectives achieved | 60 personnel assignedThe fire was very active yesterday and burned towards the Stanley Guard Station. Helicopters dropped...
Sturgill Fire Update-09/29/2022 (Sturgill Fire Wildfire)
Double Creek, Sturgill, Nebo, Goat Mountain Two FiresSeptember 29, 2022Daily Update – 8:00 AMHighlights: Yesterday saw an increase in fire behavior across the fires. Today crews will assess those active fire areas and resources stand ready to respond to any changes. Overnight precipitation and more moisture today should substantially reduce fire activity.Double Creek Fire: 161,510 acres, no change | 89% contained | 436 personnel assignedThe northern region was very active yesterday in the Cow Creek and Lightning Creek drainages. The northern portion received wetting rains overnight, and crews will assess fuel conditions in those areas today to determine resource needs for the next few days. Along the western side of the fire, suppression repair is nearly complete.Eagle Cap Wilderness Fires Sturgill Fire: 21,103 acres, no change | 72% of objectives achieved | 60 personnel assignedThe fire was very active yesterday and burned towards the Stanley Guard Station. Helicopters dropped...
Double Creek Fire Update-09/29/2022 (Double Creek Fire Wildfire)
Double Creek, Sturgill, Nebo, Goat Mountain Two FiresSeptember 29, 2022Daily Update – 8:00 AM Highlights: Yesterday saw an increase in fire behavior across the fires. Today crews will assess those active fire areas and resources stand ready to respond to any changes. Overnight precipitation and more moisture today should substantially reduce fire activity. Double Creek Fire: 161,510 acres, no change | 89% contained | 436 personnel assigned The northern region was very active yesterday in the Cow Creek and Lightning Creek drainages. The northern portion received wetting rains overnight, and crews will assess fuel conditions in those areas today to determine resource needs for the next few days. Along the western side of the fire, suppression repair is nearly complete. Eagle Cap Wilderness Fires Sturgill Fire: 21,103 acres, no change | 72% of objectives achieved | 60 personnel assigned The fire was very active yesterday and burned towards the Stanley Guard Station. Helicopters dropped...
Forest Service BAER Program Overview (Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie Post-Fire BAER Burned Area Emergency Response)
FOREST SERVICE BAER PROGRAM OVERVIEWThe Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) program is designed to identify and manage potential risks to resources on National Forest System lands and reduce these threats through appropriate emergency measures to protect human life and safety, property, and critical natural or cultural resources. BAER is an emergency program for stabilization work that involves time-critical activities to be completed before the first damaging event to meet program objectives:BAER Objectives:- Determine whether imminent post-wildfire threats to human life and safety, property, and critical natural or cultural resources on National Forest System lands exist and take immediate actions, as appropriate, to manage the unacceptable risks.- If emergency conditions are identified, mitigate significant threats to health, safety, human life, property, and critical cultural and natural resources.- Prescribe emergency response actions to stabilize and...
Goat Rocks Fire Update for September 29, 2022 (Goat Rocks Fire Wildfire)
The Goat Rocks Fire received some much-needed rain yesterday. Rainfall totaled one tenth of an inch as of 7 a.m. this morning. Most of the rain was intercepted by the crowns of trees in forested areas, with little precipitation reaching the ground-level fuels. These showers still helped calm the fire by raising the relative humidity, allowing fine fuels to absorb enough moisture to make them difficult to ignite. More rain is expected today.Some moisture is reaching hot spots resulting in steam. This will create an increase in smoke coming from the fire. No growth was seen on the fire yesterday. The acreage listed above is based on information from an infrared flight that occurred late Tuesday, reflecting 123 acres of new fire spread. Due to the rain and cloud cover no infrared flight was attempted last night. Large fuels, including logs and stumps, are still very dry. They will continue to burn until fully consumed, soaked by rain and snow, or extinguished by firefighters near...
Actualizacion Diaria Incendio Cedar Creek, Septiembre 29, 2022 (Cedar Creek Fire Wildfire)
Resumen del Incendio Cedar CreekExtensión: 115,428 acres | Contenido 25% | Fecha de Inicio: 1ro agosto, 2022 | Origen: 15 miles Este de Oakridge, OR | Causa: Relampagos | Personal: 1,272 | Recursos: 31 camión de bomberos; 29 Cuerpos bomberos; 27 Maquinaria pesada; 9 helicop. Operaciones en la Zona Oeste:El día de ayer, debido al enfriamiento de las temperaturas y lluvias ligeras, la actividad del incendio bajo su intensidad sobre el área. Ese día, las jornadas de limpieza, astillado y patrullaje en el incendio fueron las tareas primordiales sobre los limites noreste y oeste del Incendio las cuales se continuarán el día de hoy. A través de igniciones de incendio realizadas a través del uso de drones, se completaron las operaciones de quema controlada que fueron iniciadas el lunes en la parte suroeste del fuego. En los próximos días, los bomberos seguirán buscando oportunidades para continuar utilizando drones y así solidificar las funciones de control. Las...
Bolt Creek Fire Update 9/29/22 (Bolt Creek Fire Wildfire)
Bolt Creek Fire Update September 29, 2022 Incident Commander: Kent Stanford Estimated size: 12,070 acres Cause: Undetermined Resources: 175 personnel – One hotshot crew, two type-2 initial attack hand crews, two hand crews, one helicopter, 13 engines, one dozer, one water tender and 78 overhead. US 2 CLOSED: US 2 is closed between mile marker 46 and 50 due to fire activity and falling trees along the road. Fire Update: Crews continued work along the US 2 corridor on Wednesday, primarily cleaning up areas near Beckler River Road and chipping vegetation that had fallen into the road over the last few days. The fire has made it to US 2 through much of the closure area, but there still remains some areas along the highway that will have persistent pockets of heat. Today, crews will continue to mitigate hazard trees, reinforce firelines, protect structures and clear debris off US 2. Wednesday’s mild temperatures and high...
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