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2024 Wildfire Season

One of those things that sounds easy, but isn't ...



Inaccurate government data may be stoking B.C. wildfires, UBC study finds​

Firefighting and forest management decisions could be hampered by inaccurate government data, study suggests​


The biggest problem is they are using computer Sims to predict conditions and being told things are good.
To many over educated cost saving yes men making the calls.
When the people on the ground have been telling them for years that the conditions are bad and they need to actually do something about it.

No different then any other government organization trying to formulate data they want, not the actual data.
 

Why fighting wildfires is the hardest flying Air Force crews do outside combat

“150 to 200 feet above the ground, going 120 knots or so … those parameters are challenging."

BY DAVID ROZA | PUBLISHED APR 26, 2022

Forget what you’ve seen in movies: flying low and slow in large fixed-wing aircraft is tough to do. It is even more difficult while flying through mountains, where the weather is unpredictable and the terrain forbidding. Now add to the picture crowded airspace where you might collide with another aircraft if you are not careful. Oh, and by the way, half the airspace is filled with smoke and there is a wildfire raging off your wingtip with flames reaching over 100 feet high.

That kind of delicate situation is why airmen with years of experience consider aerial firefighting to be one of their most challenging missions outside of combat. But it is a mission that members of the Air Force’s 302nd Airlift Wing often find themselves on when government officials need extra hands to contain the devastating fires that spark across the country all year round.

“It does require all six of us on an H-model C-130 to work together, to be supremely proficient in the aircraft and really in sync,” said Lt. Col. Richard Pantusa, chief of aerial firefighting for the 302nd. The wing flies the C-130 Hercules, a highly-adaptable four-engine transport plane that can be modified to land on snow, shoot 105mm cannon rounds, or fly into hurricanes. But even the C-130 needs its crew on point to safely execute a low, slow aerial firefighting mission.

“150 to 200 feet above the ground, going 120 knots or so … those parameters are challenging,” Pantusa said. 120 knots is equivalent to about 138 miles per hour. In that situation, pilots must be laser-focused to make sure the aircraft is at the proper speed and altitude and headed in the right direction and in the correct configuration to prevent drag. The co-pilot meanwhile is busy looking out for hazards such as power lines, birds or smoke which can seemingly come out of nowhere so close to the ground. The navigator keeps an eye out for terrain hazards and makes sure the aircraft can get down to the target area; the engineer monitors the aircraft to make sure it is performing well and the loadmasters in the back operate the Modular Airborne Firefighting System, the 11,000-pound system of metal tubes and tanks that drops 3,000 gallons of fire retardant in less than five seconds.

“They all have a job to do and it’s all critical in nature,” Pantusa said.

But this is a military aircrew we’re talking about, right? Aren’t they trained to do this sort of thing in their sleep while getting shot at by rocket-propelled grenades? Not quite. While the crews qualified to fly aerial firefighting missions are well-trained to do the job, it is not their primary mission. The 302nd is a combat-ready tactical airlift and airdrop unit, and tactical airlift is a different ballgame from aerial firefighting.

“I’ve done this for 16 years now, and for us as tactical airlift crews it is a different mindset,” Pantusa said. “We’re trained to be lights off, quiet, undetected. But to do this mission safely it’s reversed: lights on, predictable, visible and effective communication on the radio.”

There’s a good reason why these combat-ready aircrews have to switch up their tactics to help with wildfires at home: the Laguna Fire of September 1970, when a 175,000-acre wildfire swept through southern California, killing 16 people and destroying nearly 400 buildings. In response to the disaster, Congress created the MAFFS program, ordering the U.S. Forest Service to provide the MAFFS system and the fire retardant while the Department of Defense provides the aircraft, crews and maintainers to fly the mission.

Though this article is about Air Force crews, most of the country’s aerial firefighting is carried out by a large fleet of civilian contractors such as 10 Tanker and Coulson Aviation. The MAFFS program authorized the Air Force to set up eight C-130s and their crews to be ready to help with the firefighting mission in case the civilian contractor fleet was stretched too thin by an intense fire season. One such season was June 2021, when seven out of 10 Federal Emergency Management Agency regions were experiencing large wildfire activity requiring federal assistance.

“The contract fleet was stretched to the limits,” Pantusa said. “We’re the surge force, so when we’re called in to surge, that’s what we do.”

The 302nd Airlift Wing is one of four wings in the Air Force trained and equipped to do the MAFFS mission, though the 302nd is the only unit in the Air Force Reserves that can do so. The others are all Air National Guard: California’s 146th Airlift Wing, Nevada’s 152nd Airlift Wing and Wyoming’s 153rd Airlift Wing. Each wing has two C-130s and the necessary crews trained to answer the National Interagency Fire Center’s call at a moment’s notice.

“We have 48 hours from the time they notify us to get wherever they need us to go,” Pantusa said.

Since Air Force crews like those from the 302nd are the backup, the scene is already lively when they arrive. The airspace over a fire is usually crowded with other aircraft lining up to drop retardant to help crews working on the ground. To make things more complicated, there might also be Air Force RC-26 surveillance planes collecting intelligence on the fires; helicopters scooping water for direct attacks on the fire, and other manned or unmanned planes providing support and coordination to the rest of the effort. Though the aircraft come from all over the region and even all over the world, they spend time beforehand brushing up on the same standard tactics and procedures to minimize the chance of an accident and to make the operation as efficient as possible.

“It is like a NATO operation,” in terms of getting a large number of air crews from a wide range of backgrounds on the same page, Pantusa said.
When an Air Force C-130 takes off to fight fires, it is at the disposal of the incident commander, the firefighter on the ground who comes up with the strategy for containing and knocking down the fire. Despite what it might look like from pictures, the purpose of a MAFFS mission is not to put out a fire by dropping fire retardant directly onto it. Instead, the purpose of a MAFFS mission is to drop the retardant on the place where the incident commander does not want the fire to spread, so that the ground teams can more easily contain it. After all, it’s called fire retardant, meaning to prevent or inhibit, not fire putter-outer.

“We don’t put fires out, we slow the rate of spread and cool down fire as it progresses so ground forces can get ahead of it,” Pantusa said.

The reason C-130s and other aircraft have to fly so slow and low to drop fire retardant is because it is essentially “just enhanced water,” which needs to fall to the ground vertically like rain in order to effectively coat the plants, logs and other flammable material below, the airman said.

MAFFS is an impressive system: it can drop 3,000 gallons of fire retardant weighing about 28,000 pounds through a tube out the back of the aircraft in less than five seconds. The retardant, also called “slurry” or “mud,” is 80 to 85% water and 10 to 15% ammonium sulfate, a jelling agent, and red coloring, according to the Air Force. Why red? Because it helps pilots see where they dropped previous loads. While 3,000 gallons sounds like a lot, it can cover an area only a quarter-mile long and 60 feet wide. That’s a good amount of ground, but sometimes an incident commander wants several miles covered as he or she sets up a line of containment. When that happens, “we get into a loop where we launch, drop, refill and do it again,” Pantusa said.

The maintenance crews waiting at the flightline are trained like a NASCAR pit crew, the officer explained: the plane can land, take on a fresh supply of fire retardant and take off again in as little as 15 minutes. A hard day’s work might involve six to eight drops, but crews have performed as many as 15 in a single day. Remember, each of those drops involves an intense amount of concentration to pull off, but it also requires a significant amount of flexibility.

“All it takes is the wind to shift 90 degrees and everything we’re working on can be called off,” Pantusa said. For example, if smoke blows over the drop zone, it might limit visibility, which makes it too dangerous for MAFFS crews to fly into. Luckily they do not fly alone: it’s standard procedure for C-130s and other firefighting aircraft to follow a smaller lead plane, often flown by federal or state pilots, which makes sure the conditions and wind speed are good and that the escape route is clear for the aircraft to climb back up.

“They show us where the retardant goes, we fly right behind him,” Pantusa said. “They help before you take a 150,000-pound aircraft through.”

The wing rotates out crews every week to avoid burnout, the officer explained. But fighting wildfires is still a demanding task, especially last year when all eight of the military’s MAFFS aircraft helped fight the Dixie fire. The largest single wildfire in California history, the Dixie fire covered 963,300 acres and destroyed 1,300 buildings in northern California last summer.

“We found ourselves in the situation of kind of scrambling to put together another month worth of a second crew that we didn’t know we were going to need,” Lt. Col. Patrick McKelvey, a C-130 pilot with the Nevada Air National Guard, told Air Force Magazine last year. A former Navy F/A-18 fighter pilot, McKelvey said dropping fire retardant is as challenging as a nighttime carrier landing.

“Every situation we go into is unique … You’ve never flown that line. You have absolutely no idea what you’re getting into,” he said. “And we’re going down to 150 feet and doing it far slower than we would normally do an airdrop because of the way the retardant comes out of the airplane. So, it’s lower, you’re heavier at max gross weight, you’re using far more power. It’s hot, you’re at high altitude up in the mountains, canyons, obstacles, trees. Next to flying around the aircraft carrier at night, this is probably some of the most high-risk flying I’ve ever done.”

The fires could get worse in future summers. Multiple studies show that climate change is making wildfires season longer and more devastating, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Part of the reason why the season is longer is due to warmer springs, longer summer dry seasons, and drier soils and vegetation, the EPA said.

“Climate change threatens to increase the frequency, extent, and severity of fires through increased temperatures and drought,” the agency wrote. “Earlier spring melting and reduced snowpack result in decreased water availability during hot summer conditions, which in turn contributes to an increased wildfire risk, allowing fires to start more easily and burn hotter.”

However, it is unclear whether that means Air Force crews like those of the 302nd Wing will find themselves fighting more fires. Many factors affect whether Air Force MAFFS crews are sent in to help, and it’s not just the amount of acreage burning, Pantusa explained. For example, the most intense year for Air Force MAFFS in terms of sorties flown was 1994, and no military crews flew MAFFS missions in some years as recently as 2019, he said.

“There are a lot of variables: the contract civilian fleet gets larger and smaller based on federal funding,” the airman said. “And it’s not just that fire is burning, it’s where it burns, so significant risk to population centers is another factor.”


No matter what happens this summer, MAFFS crews like Pantusa’s are trained to respond when needed. The missions can bring up a strange mix of emotions, because while it is rewarding to pull off a MAFFS drop, it is also heartbreaking to meet people who lost their homes.

“We sometimes end up eating breakfast with folks whose house burned down,” Pantusa said. “It’s a spectrum of emotions, both rewarding and tragic.”

Hopefully there are far fewer folks with burned homes thanks to the efforts of the Air Force MAFFS program and the larger fleet of civilian contractors who do the mission year-round.

“It’s a culmination of a lot of training and cooperation because we do work with so many partners in both government and industry,” Pantusa said. “There’s a level of trust and competency which combine to do something really useful.”
 
I believe it. Those pilots are flying those big frames like fighters.
 
And we're off!

Wildfire near Lumby, B.C. being held​


A wildfire discovered burning in the North Okanagan is now being held.
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According to the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), a fire burning in the Creighton Valley area, just outside of Lumby, B.C. grew to roughly three hectares, 320,000 square feet, before firefighters stopped its growth.
https://globalnews.ca/news/10366588/wildfire-burning-near-lumby-bc/

 
And we're off!

Wildfire near Lumby, B.C. being held​


A wildfire discovered burning in the North Okanagan is now being held.
70c8fc80

According to the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), a fire burning in the Creighton Valley area, just outside of Lumby, B.C. grew to roughly three hectares, 320,000 square feet, before firefighters stopped its growth.
Wildfire near Lumby, B.C. being held | Globalnews.ca

We were already off, 30+ fires burned all winter.
 
7 year cycles of drought and flood are about par for the course out here. Sloughs filled in the early 2010s, in some cases sinking roads, and stayed that way until just a year or so ago.

There is one local farmer I pass regularly that got his timing wrong. He had a dry field he decided to irrigate. He bought himself a pivot and installed it. That same year that field flooded and stayed flooded for the next five years.

Life in the Palliser Triangle.
The tenuous water situation in Sask and AB sure makes me glad my ancestors settled in the Northern Red River Valley. Nothing but water on the family farm haha. Let's hope that lasts this year.
 
The tenuous water situation in Sask and AB sure makes me glad my ancestors settled in the Northern Red River Valley. Nothing but water haha. Let's hope that lasts this year.

You have water. I don't have mosquitoes. ;)
 
The tenuous water situation in Sask and AB sure makes me glad my ancestors settled in the Northern Red River Valley. Nothing but water haha. Let's hope that lasts this year.
Level 4 drought is currently forecasted for AB, 60% chance of becoming level 5 without more rain
 
Level 4 drought is currently forecasted for AB, 60% chance of becoming level 5 without more rain
I'll pray for the farmers. I'm of MB farmer stock and understand the stress these kinds of crop conditions can cause people. We still run the family farm and I can't imagine what years of drought is like, one year can be stressful enough.
 
You have water. I don't have mosquitoes. ;)
In those real bad mosquito years it was because of spring flooding which means we would have a bumper crop, I'm cool with skeeters haha.

Just gotta bring lots of bug dope to Shilo and we're cooking with gas haha.
 
In those real bad mosquito years it was because of spring flooding which means we would have a bumper crop, I'm cool with skeeters haha.

Just gotta bring lots of bug dope to Shilo and we're cooking with gas haha.

The benefit of nothing around to block of the wind is they usually get blown off.
 
If anybody knows Creighton Valley Road near Lumby, you won't be surprised how the "humans" caused the wild fire ...:ROFLMAO:
 
Arsonists are out early this year.
Except the BC fire was a slash pile that got away. Not arson.

Surprised they announced it in the news article but it's not a surprise as slash pile burning is well known to hold hot spots that get exposed under the right conditions and then take off into a wildfire.
 
I'm relieved there is a big jump in carbon tax coming in April, just in time to slow down this climate crisis.

Thank you JT!
 
44 fires so far this season in Alberta...largest was 214 ha from Feb.23

50 fires carried over and while most are under control some are only being held. No out of control fires at this time.
Hopefully the all this snow we are supposed to get this week will help with the fires.
 
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