LA/Woolsey Fire

can't imagine having to drive through and trying to evacuate with fire surrounding me
co-worker's fam lost everything in the nor-cal fires :frown:

like someone said, these wildfires are unpredictable and can spread instantly
 
Yup. We're seeing the type of fires that used to occur once in a generation occur 3 - 4x a year now.







I think it's hard to fathom what the situation is like without actually being in it.

Trust, people aren't dying in these fires because they're stubborn mules, or because they're trying to save material or personal items.

The descriptions given by survivors, ecologist and other scientist up here in Northern California these past two years are ****ing nuts.

1) You can't literally see the fire coming for miles like a tornado. The paths of the fires can be unpredictable. The rates at which these fires move, I still can't wrap my head around.

Fires burning areas the size of a football field every second - you can't outrun or outdrive that.

Wind can carry burning soot for miles causing fire to literally rain from the sky starting new fires unexpectedly.

Wild fires burn underground for years after they extinguish on the earth's surface. When new surface level fires start, the underground fires basically explode causing the area above to combust.

2) These rural areas are rural. Not very many roads, if there's even more than one. People get stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic for hours on hours. People get slowed down trying to care for the sick and the elderly and those who aren't mobile for any reason. Fires start and spread in the middle of the night when people are asleep, etc.



These are natural disasters that are fell less predictable or known than something like a hurricane.

Good lord :{
 
And you're talking about an area like Malibu, there's effectively two ways out, 101 or the PCH.

The PCH is a 4 lane "highway" where traffic is at standstill on regular weekdays.
 
These rich people have insurance. They'll be fine. They might actually even come out ahead after their property is assessed and valued
Not necessarily true. Remember, a lot of folks purchased these homes a long time ago when the value wasn’t anywhere near as high as today’s market. So when they bought the home they got coverage for the purchase value and kept automatic payments and re-upped every year thinking they got proper coverage. There’s a decent chance these homeowners are assed out because they didn’t keep up with their insurance agent.
 
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This is truly terrifying and unfortunate. Those pics from that article, I couldn't even fathom experiencing that and from what @northoaklandfc described it sounds like its a situation that you can't escape, its like a terrible nightmare, not only losing your home/possessions, but in the manner it happens. Fire coming from nowhere and eating communities whole.

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:ohwell:
 
There are alot of factors that affect wildfires.
The top reason is the drought.

The areas burned were supposed to reach 4-5 inches of rain on average in the fall months but i dont they they even got 1 inch.

That dryness plus the dry winds are a recipe for disaster.
 
I've always wondered how these fires get started...is it from a random cigarette butt, or a lightning strike in a dry area?

Also as technologically advanced as things are, I'd think there'd be better ways of fighting them by now.

Hope this resolved ASAP.
 
I've always wondered how these fires get started...is it from a random cigarette butt, or a lightning strike in a dry area?

Also as technologically advanced as things are, I'd think there'd be better ways of fighting them by now.

Hope this resolved ASAP.
Those are definitely some of the factors that could start a fire.

I hope it wasn't due to someone being a dummy. The last fire in SoCal, some guy started the fire. The police knew it was him because his cabin was the only cabin that didn't burn down.
 
I've always wondered how these fires get started...is it from a random cigarette butt, or a lightning strike in a dry area?

Also as technologically advanced as things are, I'd think there'd be better ways of fighting them by now.

Hope this resolved ASAP.

Camp Fire up here in Norcal (now the most destructive and deadliest in CA history) was apparently started by downed PG&E wires.

They're down 50% down since it started on the 8th.
 
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