Brown Sunshine

The smoke from the fires to the north and east are still causing problems here. Yesterday afternoon, the trip home showed about 1 mile visibility with temps around 106-108. Walking around this is like walking in hot fog. I’m getting a bit of throat irritation from the smoke, even through I am staying inside. I only go outside to get to the car and from the car to the house.

Today, the smoke is not as thick here at the office. But a look outside shows that the sunshine is not bright, it’s a dull brown. You can see it in the sun patterns on the ground. Visibility here is a couple of miles.

What is needed is a good breeze to blow all this smoke out of the valley. But that’s a Catch-22. More wind helps the fire spread faster. But all that smoke is stopping the air assets from fighting the fire. They need more wind to increase the visibility so they can fly water and retardant drops. But more wind means more erratic fire behavior.

What we really need is a good series of rain storms to damp down the fire and smoke. But that’s not in the forecast. The weather dweebs are predicting 105-100 today and tomorrow, with 95-100 starting Saturday. But not much wind to help blow out the smoke.

In the meantime, the area around Paradise CA is still threatened, with upwards of 10,000 people displaced. And the two other big fires in the Foresthill wilderness area (north-east of Sacramento) have merged together.

Doesn’t look good for us air-breathers.

Headline Prediction: “Paradise Lost”

Although it hasn’t happened yet, it is inevitable that you’ll see that headline soon.

The town of Paradise (CA, about 90 miles north of Sacramento CA) has given 14,000 people immediate evacuation notices today. On a map, that’s almost all of the east side of that town.

The Chico Enterprise Record (nearby newspaper in Chico CA) has a great map of the fire boundaries and evacuation areas here . There’s a great potential for damage if the fire gets into the ‘green’ (evacuation) areas.

And the weather is not helping. There is so much smoke that the fire retardant-dropping planes and water-dropping helicopters can’t fly.

Not good.

Smoke – No Mirrors and No Cooling

The fires around California continue to spew smoke all around the Sacramento Valley. The evening moon-set showed a very orange moon, and the sunrise was more “sun-red”. Visibility is still 5-10 miles around here.

And the fires up in Paradise (about 90 miles north of here) are getting very aggressive. Over 40 homes destroyed, and 7000 people evacuated. This is the same area that burned a couple of weeks ago.

The weather here is really hot, with some dry winds that aren’t helping. The official high yesterday in Sacramento was 107, but my car’s outside thermometer showed 111 on the way home yesterday. Today’s high is supposed to be 109, as is tomorrow. And our usual overnight cool down isn’t working now; overnight temps about 75. So the AC stays on overnight.

Of course, as we say around here, “It’s a dry heat.” Humidity is under 30%, although some weather stations are reporting higher humidity, but I think that is because of all the smoke in the air. So the heat could be worse. (I’ve experienced ‘worse’ – a trip to the Texas coast during the summer when the temps and humidity were both in the 90’s all night long.)

Supposed to get a bit cooler this weekend; just the upper 90’s. But all that heat is not helping those firefighters, many of whom have been working for 3-4 weeks straight.

Be careful out there!

(Today: 265)

Smokin!

Still lots of fires around California, along with a high pressure area sitting over the state. The result is winds from the north driving all that smoke into the valley. Air quality is pretty bad; the morning sun is really orange from all the smoke. And temps in the 100’s don’t make things any better.

Over 1700 fires in the state, but down to 330 active fires. Here’s a good map of most of the fires in the state: http://www.oes.ca.gov/WebPage/oeswebsite.nsf/InteractiveMap?readForm . Another map here http://www.fire.ca.gov/downloads/incidents/StatewideFireMap_070708_PM.pdf .

So it’s inside for me. Although I don’t have any allergies, I have noticed a bit of throat irritation from the smoke.

We drove back from Utah on Sunday. There is still a lot of smoke in the mountains, up to the 6000 foot level. You can’t see across Donner Lake from the freeway, normally a really pretty view of the lake and surrounding mountains. Visibility at the 4000 foot level was about 5 miles. At the Sacramento valley floor level, Sunday visibility in the evening was about 10 miles.

And it doesn’t appear there will be any relief soon. Temps are projected at 100-108 degrees (F) through the weekend. Because of the smoke layer, the overnight temps aren’t getting below about 75. We normally open the windows at night to get a bit of breeze and to save on AC costs. Not this week. We set the thermostat at 83 degrees at night, and keep the bedroom ceiling fan going.

This next month’s electric bill will be quite impressive.

More Fires and Less Smoke

The “virus wars” at the office have calmed down. Forcing (via centralized management) full scans every three hours has removed most infections. Some ‘isolated pockets of resistance’ are being found and resolved.

Had a nice visit with Pam’s sister and Mom (here from Houston) on Sunday. BBQ steaks for all, then brownies and ice cream. Small portions for me all around as part of the simple diet plan.

And the smoke from the more than 1200 fires around here is starting to clear a bit, thanks to a nice breeze from the ocean through the SF Bay area. Smoke has cleared to about the 2000 foot level. Actually saw the coastal mountains (about 90 miles west) on our walk last night. Still lots of fires out there, though.

Sun = 246
Mon = 245
Tue = 245

Still Smoking

The air around here is still filled with smoke from all of the fires around here. Visibility on the way home was 3-5 miles.

The CalFire guys have a Google map of many of the fires in the state here http://www.oes.ca.gov/WebPage/oeswebsite.nsf/OpenBranchContent/29AB11FAF23F909388257466006452B7?OpenDocument . Zoom in a bit, and you can see some of the 800+ fires that are burning now.

The weather dweebs say that the smoke will be here for several days. And some dry lightening storms this weekend are not a good thing.

Today: 265.

Computer Sickness

Virus infection at work has taken most of my time. A lot of scanning and testing to determine the fix.

As to the source, probably inconsistant security policies is all I can talk about. But perhaps this will be an incentive to fix those policies.

Today: 255.