If this fire hadn't stalled for a week the towns it's moving in on the next 24 hours (Featherville and Pine) would have been overrun, as well Fall creek resort and probably another town, Rocky Bar. The issue is till in doubt, though it looks much better than last Friday. The fire is still threatening Featherville, advancing on Pine, and could cut off the firefighters as well as access to another town, Atlanta. It might also eventually reach a larger community, Idaho City. It's also overrun a couple mines and is threatening some airstrips (which are important up in the mountains).
For those of you who don't know what it takes to fight a fire like this (100,000+ acres):
A total of 1,141 Forest Service firefighters(24 crews)
63 engines
two dozers
21 water tenders
USAF C130s with MAFFS systems (they fly overhead every 10 or 15 minutes and have been doing so for weeks now. I don't even notice anymore)
Single engine air tankers
I don't whose it is, but there's been what appears to be a DC9 dropping retardant too (anyone know who that belongs to?)
A couple helicopters with water buckets
Mountain home fire department
Mountain Home AFB fire department
Mountain Home rural FD
I can't find the list, but local/city FD's from as far away as SLC are sending firefighters and resources now.
It takes this magnitude of resources, firefighters, and a lot of luck to just to deflect a crown fire (upper parts of trees burning) around a couple tiny little towns.
I threw that list of resources and manpower in because I've been asked by no fewer than 5 people visiting from 'back east' why the firefighters "don't just put the fire out? They do it all the time with the [brush]fires where I live!" The only thing that put a fire this size in the mountains is God Himself. The large mountain fires in Idaho (and elsewhere) generally don't go out until there's enough snow coating brush and trees to stop the fire, though some in the past have smoldered through the winter and started burning again in spring (!).
To address one other thing someone from back east wondered about: why don't the firefighters get in there and fight the fire toe-to-toe? Answer: because that's suicide. They could be killed by one gust of the wind. Additionally, fires like this don't spread just by flames leaping from tree to tree. The updraft from the fire can rain embers down up to a couple miles away. Think brimstone... many small fires break out ahead of the main and blend together to form its front.
Godspeed and may He protect our firefighters
1 posted on
08/23/2012 3:49:32 PM PDT by
verum ago
To: verum ago
The only thing that can put a fire this size out in the mountains is God Himself
Yeesh. Good thing I don't type for a living.
2 posted on
08/23/2012 3:52:21 PM PDT by
verum ago
(A good physical therapist is half friend, half sadist.)
To: verum ago
For someone a long way from there a link to a scanner
feed would be great
Prayers up for rain to end this nightmare
3 posted on
08/23/2012 4:48:16 PM PDT by
Harold Shea
(RVN `70 - `71)
To: verum ago
The first time I saw a major forest fire in the White Mountains of Arizona, I was astonished to see entire trees reach the ignition point and burst into flames. It was really frightening.
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