Uncle Sam
Member
To All,
The California drought and forest fires have been in the news media for many months now, so this post is about the fire only. I will leave my thoughts on the drought for another post. The reporters for the news media have a natural inclination to exaggerate everything. Since I have lived and worked in California’s Great Central Valley within 50 miles of the aptly named “Rough Fire” for over 50 years now, I wanted to try to bring a little perspective to all the media attention given to these circumstances.
Lindsay is located on the eastern edge of the Central Valley at an elevation of 350 feet above sea level and I can look out my back window and see the beginnings of the Sierra Nevada Mountains within a few miles of my house. The Sierra Nevada range is roughly 50-70 miles wide running along the eastern border of the State of California and runs from south of Bakersfield (60 miles south of Lindsay) to the Oregon border in the north; about 500 miles in a north-north-westerly direction. That equates to a mountainous area of approximately 25000 to 35000 square miles!!! The highest mountain in the continental U.S. is Mt Whitney (at over 14,000 feet) near the southern end and at the eastern edge of the Sierra Nevada's. Mt Shasta (an inactive volcano cone) is also over 14000 feet and near the northern end. Mt Whitney is 50 miles from where I live as the crow flies and 150 miles if I wanted to drive there and hike up to the top. There few roads across the Sierras because of the many peaks over 10,000 feet and the very steep canyons in between. It is very rough country indeed.
The “Rough Fire”, which is still burning and not contained, is 50 miles northeast of me and has burned almost 90,000 acres (140 square miles) of some very rough country. (It is not much when compared to the total mountainous area.) The fire was started by Mother Nature (lightning) at the top of a mountain and burned down into the Kings River canyon, jumped the river, and up the other side of the canyon burning toward Kings Canyon National Park and Sequoia National Park. As stated above there are few roads into this country and very few structures to burn. It is essentially a wilderness area and has not burnt off for almost 100 years. There are layers of dead trees, dead brush, and dead leaves and grass that provide plenty of fuel to support the fire as it moves along. The smoke from this fire covers the mountains so we cannot see them and does come into the valley now and then.
Cont'd
The California drought and forest fires have been in the news media for many months now, so this post is about the fire only. I will leave my thoughts on the drought for another post. The reporters for the news media have a natural inclination to exaggerate everything. Since I have lived and worked in California’s Great Central Valley within 50 miles of the aptly named “Rough Fire” for over 50 years now, I wanted to try to bring a little perspective to all the media attention given to these circumstances.
Lindsay is located on the eastern edge of the Central Valley at an elevation of 350 feet above sea level and I can look out my back window and see the beginnings of the Sierra Nevada Mountains within a few miles of my house. The Sierra Nevada range is roughly 50-70 miles wide running along the eastern border of the State of California and runs from south of Bakersfield (60 miles south of Lindsay) to the Oregon border in the north; about 500 miles in a north-north-westerly direction. That equates to a mountainous area of approximately 25000 to 35000 square miles!!! The highest mountain in the continental U.S. is Mt Whitney (at over 14,000 feet) near the southern end and at the eastern edge of the Sierra Nevada's. Mt Shasta (an inactive volcano cone) is also over 14000 feet and near the northern end. Mt Whitney is 50 miles from where I live as the crow flies and 150 miles if I wanted to drive there and hike up to the top. There few roads across the Sierras because of the many peaks over 10,000 feet and the very steep canyons in between. It is very rough country indeed.
The “Rough Fire”, which is still burning and not contained, is 50 miles northeast of me and has burned almost 90,000 acres (140 square miles) of some very rough country. (It is not much when compared to the total mountainous area.) The fire was started by Mother Nature (lightning) at the top of a mountain and burned down into the Kings River canyon, jumped the river, and up the other side of the canyon burning toward Kings Canyon National Park and Sequoia National Park. As stated above there are few roads into this country and very few structures to burn. It is essentially a wilderness area and has not burnt off for almost 100 years. There are layers of dead trees, dead brush, and dead leaves and grass that provide plenty of fuel to support the fire as it moves along. The smoke from this fire covers the mountains so we cannot see them and does come into the valley now and then.
Cont'd