Early morning from my front door -- two weeks ago |
Are you familiar with the word ‘estivate’? i.e. to go into a prolonged state of torpor
or dormancy . I feel as though Mother
Nature is causing Dale and me to estivate.
We are like an old tortoise in the Southwest who has dug underground,
pulled its head in, and waits for better times.
We open one eye, take a peek outside, and dig back down again. ….. or I look at the air quality index and
think about whether I dare open our windows up for the night in order to cool
the house down.
It is murky out there …. Smoky! Way too smoky. Most of the past month has varied between a
little smoke, a lot of smoke, and way too smoky. We did
have two glorious blue sky days last week.
Suddenly our world sparkled again, the birds were happy, and insects
were busy catching up on their endeavors.
The wind had switched to the northwest, bringing fresh Pacific air.
Takenitch Lake near the Oregon Coast on one of our rare blue sky days |
Oregon is having one of its worst fire seasons. Over 500 square miles are burning and each
day the number grows. The largest, the
‘Chetco Bar Fire’ is over 140,000 acres.
There are so many fires burning right now that they group them into ‘complexes.’ When it is so dry, firefighters can’t begin
to put them all out . They try to save
structures and figure out where best to use their available resources. Oregon currently has about 10,000 people on
the fires and more coming. Some National
Guard troops are being called in to help.
If we were the only state involved, we’d be getting more help from other
states; but all too many of the surrounding states are in the same
predicament.
On Aug 13 I blogged about fires upriver from us. The one I photographed has grown to 4566
acres as of today, but they did succeed in keeping it on one side of the
highway and protected the nearby homes on the other side. The little fires upriver closed the highway a
few days after I blogged and it remains closed.
Several fires in that area have joined together and have grown to 18,387
acres. There is a little community up
there with 24 people. They lost power …
and so the food in their freezers. Then
they had to evacuate for several days. They
are finally allowed to go home but have to travel the long way around (
approximately 300 miles) instead of the relatively short trip home from Roseburg
or Glide.
Burnt pine needles and ash on the hood of our car |
At first the smoke here was tolerable, but the fires kept
growing and a little over a week ago one started only about thirty miles from
us. I assume that fire is the one that
sprinkled ash on us late one day – little flakes came drifting
down. When I went out to the car in the
morning, I found burnt pine needle on the hood.
When I touched one, Poof! It
crumpled into nothingness. Just a wisp
of ash.
My painting of the evening sun |
I decided to write about the fires because after talking to
two sets of Wisconsin friends, I realized there hasn’t been much on the news
about Oregon’s fires. Of course
hurricane Harvey is the big news, but fires don’t seem to get any
attention. What about the hundreds of
acres of forest that are burning? Even
our local newspaper concentrates on road closures and evacuation levels for the
few homes that are affected.
Just outside of town about a week ago |
Where I live, I’m quite safe. I’m in town.
Most lawns are browned, but the grass is short. We have a law in town that says we must cut
weeds and grasses grasses before they get twelve inches tall. When a local fire gets going, the fire trucks
are on it immediately. The Umpqua River
flows through town so there is plenty of water.
Most people, who live near town, create a ‘defensable space’ around
their homes.
The big issue right now is that we are having a heat wave …
temperatures of over 100 degrees for 3 or 4 days. Lousy weather for the firefighters. Soon
we’ll be back in the 80s and 90s, but fire season will last until the rains
come — probably not before early October.
We here in Idaho (and our lungs) feel your pain. Here's a list of current fires by state:
ReplyDeleteCalifornia (14)
Idaho (4)
Montana (28!)
Nevada (4)
Oregon (17)
Utah (1)
Washington (5)
Wyoming (1)
Estivation is a great simile.
Too bad Hurricane Harvey didn't spread its bounty widely instead of dumping it all along the Gulf.
17 fires for Oregon. Don't I wish. Quite a few of our fires are lumped into 'complexes.' I just counted 64 fires on the government web site.
DeleteSo true - I failed to clarify that the numbers I listed were "fire complexes", made of multiple fires (300,000 acres on fire in Oregon as of yesterday).
DeleteElva, what a good review of our situation. Your painting of the sun is beautiful, though. Really looking forward to that first rain, whenever that is! We are staying indoors as much as possible, too.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Polly. A good review. It's just been horrible. We are close to you but not being in city limits like you, not everyone mowed their fields and I'm not going to feel relieved until the rains come. Had small flakes of ash today. The smokes so thick one almost needs to cut it to move even.
ReplyDeleteIt is heart breaking to hear about these awful fires. I hope the fall rains come early to help put them out. Stay safe.
ReplyDeleteSad for sure, but an informative recap of the situation. The little rain we've had in the last couple of days is a start, but we need much more to be a game changer and without lightning.
ReplyDelete