American Wildfires

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
You're right, I'll take mosquitos over fire ants any day. Luckily I don't have them where I live.
We have a bug called a "stump fucker" that I've heard hurts really bad, I've never had an encounter with one but it's supposed to be very painful.
Could be a tall tale. The Ichneumon has a long ovipositor with which it lays eggs in wood, but Wiki says they do not inject venom.

Out here we have the velvet ant, a flightless wasp. Book I read as a kid said they dont sting. But later I found out that when provoked, their sting is so bad they gained the nick “ cow killer”. But they only get max 3 on the Schmidt index. Here is a read from an amusing masochist.

 

Funkentelechy

Well-Known Member
Could be a tall tale. The Ichneumon has a long ovipositor with which it lays eggs in wood, but Wiki says they do not inject venom.

Out here we have the velvet ant, a flightless wasp. Book I read as a kid said they dont sting. But later I found out that when provoked, their sting is so bad they gained the nick “ cow killer”. But they only get max 3 on the Schmidt index. Here is a read from an amusing masochist.

I think you're right.
 

Dorian2

Well-Known Member
Me too, my favorite is Yellow Jacket Campground at Union Valley Res.....smh
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Love emoji was for the pristine looking conditions that remind me of our own National Parks here in Western Canada FYI. We caught a LOT of smoke from our neighbors in BC this year. These wildfires are pretty devastating to our natural resources. No matter what country you're from.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/fires-environment-and-nature-lakes-57d7b821afacfac5ffd586bb897150d8
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SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. (AP) — Fire officials ordered more evacuations around the Tahoe Basin as a two-week old blaze encroached on the threatened mountain towns surrounding glimmering Lake Tahoe.

By nightfall, all residents on the California side of the Lake Tahoe Basin were warned to evacuate the region, after fire officials had stressed for days that protecting the area was their top firefighting priority.

“Today’s been a rough day and there’s no bones about it,” Jeff Marsoleis, forest supervisor for El Dorado National Forest, said Sunday evening. A few days ago, he thought crews could halt the Caldor Fire’s eastern progress, but “today it let loose.”

Flames churned through mountains just a few miles southwest of the Tahoe Basin, where thick smoke sent tourists packing at a time when summer vacations would usually be in full swing ahead of the Labor Day weekend.

“To put it in perspective, we’ve been seeing about a half-mile of movement on the fire’s perimeter each day for the last couple of weeks, and today, this has already moved at 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) on us, with no sign that it’s starting to slow down,” said Cal Fire Division Chief Erich Schwab.

Some areas of the Northern California terrain are so rugged that crews had to carry fire hoses by hand from Highway 50 as they sought to douse spot fires caused by erratic winds.

The forecast did not offer optimism: triple-digit temperatures were possible and the extreme heat was expected to last several days. A red flag warning for critical fire conditions was issued for Monday and Tuesday across the Northern Sierra.

The blaze that broke out August 14 was 19% contained after burning nearly 245 square miles (635 square kilometers) — an area larger than Chicago. More than 600 structures have been destroyed and at least 18,000 more were under threat.

The Caldor Fire has proved so difficult to fight that fire managers pushed back the projected date for full containment from early this week to Sept. 8. But even that estimate was tenuous.

In Southern California, a section Interstate 15 was closed Sunday afternoon after winds pushed a new blaze, dubbed the Railroad Fire, across lanes in the Cajon Pass northeast of Los Angeles.

Further south, evacuation orders and warnings were still in place for remote communities after a wildfire broke out and spread quickly through the Cleveland National Forest on Saturday. A firefighter received minor injuries and two structures were destroyed in the 2.3-square-mile (5.9-square-kilometer) Chaparral Fire burning along the border of San Diego and Riverside counties, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. It was 10% contained Sunday.

Meanwhile, California’s Dixie Fire, the second-largest in state history at 1,193 square miles (3,089 square kilometers) was 48% contained in the Sierra-Cascades region about 65 miles (105 kilometers) north of the Caldor Fire. Nearly 700 homes were among almost 1,300 buildings that have been destroyed since the fire began in early July.

Containment increased to 22% on the 12-day-old French Fire, which covered more than 38 square miles (98 square kilometers) in the southern Sierra Nevada. Crews protected forest homes on the west side of Lake Isabella, a popular recreation area northeast of Bakersfield.

More than a dozen large fires are being fought by more than 15,200 firefighters across California. Flames have destroyed around 2,000 structures and forced thousands to evacuate this year while blanketing large swaths of the West in unhealthy smoke.

The California fires are among nearly 90 large blazes in the U.S. Many are in the West, burning trees and brush desiccated by drought. Climate change has made the region warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make the weather more extreme and wildfires more destructive, according to scientists.

The Department of Defense is sending 200 U.S. Army soldiers from Washington state and equipment including eight U.S. Air Force C-130 aircraft to help firefighters in Northern California, the U.S. Army North said in a statement Saturday. The C-130s have been converted to air tankers that can dump thousands of gallons of water on the flames.
 

Moldy

Well-Known Member

Rurumo

Well-Known Member
Love emoji was for the pristine looking conditions that remind me of our own National Parks here in Western Canada FYI. We caught a LOT of smoke from our neighbors in BC this year. These wildfires are pretty devastating to our natural resources. No matter what country you're from.
Most of the smoke we get in Western Montana are from the BC fires, besides our own local fires, which LUCKILY were pummeled by multiple quality storms in the last 2 weeks. When you look at fire maps, it's amazing how many there are in BC.
 

Moflow

Well-Known Member
Instead of pussy footing around spending billions of dollars trying to contain these fires is it not about time to load up the B52 Stratofortresses and blow the fuck outta the fires?
 
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