NEWS Wallowa.com Wednesday, June 26, 2019 A7 Fire season: Signifi cant large wildfi res predicted Continued from Page A1 fi res each were burning in Alaska and Arizona; two each in Washington and Cal- ifornia; three in New Mex- ico; and one in Florida. Regional outlook In the Northwest, NIFC predicts the potential for signifi cant large fi res will be normal with the excep- tion of the coastal areas and far Northern Idaho and Montana. In California, NIFC expects above-normal fi re risk in June and July in the San Francisco Bay Area, Sacramento Valley and central coast, the excep- tion being the mountainous Mendocino National Forest, which will be normal. For August and Septem- ber, normal or above-nor- mal fi re risk is forecast for the northern half of the state. National Interagency Fire Center /Capital Press An engine crew watches an air tanker drop water on the 2015 Chelan Fires in Washington’s Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. Grassland, timberland Bryan Henry, meteorolo- gist and acting fi re weather program manager for NIFC Predictive Services, said year-to-date moisture was above normal in Califor- nia and in much of Southern Idaho and Eastern Oregon. That will produce a robust crop of grass and other fi ne fuels that keeps rangeland fi refi ghters busy later in the season, when temperatures rise. He also expects a late start for the timberland fi re season, especially at higher elevations. A late, heavy snowpack and lingering colder-than-normal weather have kept fuels wet longer. But the drier timberland areas in northwestern Oregon and in Washington state, and in Idaho near the Canadian border, “could see a near-nor- mal start and progression” of the fi re season in June, Henry said. “Then, activity could be above-average for the season.” July temperatures should be close to normal from the Sierra Nevada to the Colum- bia Basin and the North- ern Rockies, he said. That’s in contrast to weather that averaged about 5 degrees warmer the last several years. In July, “we also should see some above-nor- mal precipitation.” Soil moisture is ample in much of the Great Basin and California, which could por- tend higher humidity in the afternoons as temperatures rise, Henry said. “Grasses would not be as excessively dry. Fire spread rates would be lower in that scenario, but that is a matter of wind speed.” Training increases The Bureau of Land Management last year con- ducted 39 fi refi ghter train- ing sessions with volunteer rangeland fi re protection associations involving 692 RFPA members, said Steve Acarregui, national coopera- tor and veteran affairs coor- dinator for the BLM Fire and Aviation Directorate. “The outlook for 2019 is a little uptick — just over 40 trainings and over 700 mem- bers receiving BLM-funded training.” Nationwide, more than 8,200 trained fi refi ght- ers work with or cooper- ate with BLM. Acarre- gui said the agency spends about $1 million a year to train local cooperators such as rangeland associations and rural fi re departments, develop fi eld communica- tion plans and aid in leader- ship development. ‘Reality check’ Henry said on June 14 that about 20,000 lightning strikes during the previous two nights in Northern Cal- ifornia, the Northwest and much of the Rockies and Great Basin proved valuable to forecasters. “We needed a good test and reality check to make sure our assumptions were correct based on the numer- ical guidance we had, and they were correct,” he said. “The substantial lightning we had occurred in areas we had questions about.” Earlier data “indicated the that fuels were drying at a slower-than-average rate and were not yet receptive” to fi re, Henry said. “That did prove to be the case.” For example, light- ning-caused fi res on grasses in Oregon — concentrated in the state’s central and east- ern regions — and near the Idaho-Utah line were mostly an acre or smaller, and short- lived, he said. But the storms origi- nated from the Pacifi c and included moisture. More typically this time of year, the storms originate from the Southwest and bring less rain, Henry said. “This is not the kind of event we want to see in July,” when the landscape will be signifi cantly drier, he said. Set to go In north-central Idaho, the Nez Perce-Clearwa- ter National Forests include steep, grassy canyons where fi re can spread quickly, with timber and towns sprinkled throughout. At a higher ele- vation south of the Clearwa- ter River is a fi refi ghting air- craft and smokejumper base in Grangeville. “If we get a smoke report, we want to get on it quickly to ensure the fi re remains small,” public affairs spe- cialist Gregg Goodland said. “As you move up in eleva- tion, you gradually change to a brush-type fuel, and those fi res are going to hold different challenges,” such as bigger fl ames. Nez Perce-Clearwater fi re managers this season expect average activity. “We are expecting some large fi res, like normal, and the possibility of numer- ous fi res at once,” Good- land said on June 10. “As we see storms develop and conditions getting more ripe to support fi re, in terms of preparations and what we are expecting, it’s kind of all right there.” During last year’s busy wildfi re season, the Nez Perce-Clearwater forests caught a break. “Lightning just seemed to go around us,” he said. Season accelerates However, the outlook is as changeable as the weather. A delay in timberland fi re activity could prolong the prescribed-burn sea- son, which typically ends as fuels dry and personnel are called to other fi res, John Bailey, a professor of silvi- culture and fi re management at Oregon State University, said June 6. “But in general, the West is going to be in fi re season fairly soon,” he said. “Most Introducing Orthopedic Surgeon Dr. Adam Heisinger • Doctor of Osteopathy, Des Moines University, Iowa • Internship and Residency completed in orthopedic surgery at Affinity Medical Center, Ohio; Fellowship in sports medicine completed at Orthopedic Research of Virginia, Richmond • Served four years as flight surgeon, Langley Air Force Base, Virginia and Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina factors of the last 15 years are still in play,” including increases in fi re severity and acres burned, greater human presence and some decline in active land management that incorporates harvest. “Fuels are still growing, every year and every day. “Everyone basically expects it’s only going to get worse in the near term,” Bailey said. However, he said, “It’s not going to apply every year in every location. It’s a complex world.” Henry said last fall’s big California fi res occurred amid critically dry fuels, high temperatures, and humidity in the 10-15% range. “And we had some gusty wind events, like down-sloping winds.” Those fi res far exceeded expectations, he said. “The behavior we saw from those fi res was more severe than what we would otherwise expect. We expected very aggressive fi res, but these things were almost off-the- charts bad.” California’s high-ele- vation timber this year is in better shape because of an ample snow melt and should see a “late entry” into peak fi re season, Henry said. August heat likely will pose problems in middle- and low-elevation grasses plumped by earlier heavy rain but subsequently dried. As to what is considered a “normal” U.S. wildfi re season, the average num- ber of acres burned has been increasing over time despite year-to-year variations, Henry said. “So it is almost a fl oating average.” Moore, the Mountain Home fi re chief, said light- ning strikes, power-line issues and an increase in the number of people living in the wildland-urban interface can add to the fi re workload. “Plan your work and work your plan because it’s something you live with in the desert,” he said. “And most often when it gets dry, we are susceptible to fi res.” Time for a Computer Tuneup? Spyware Removal • 541-426-0108 113 E. Main St., Enterprise Ellen Morris Bishop TOP Bowlby Bash driver Jude Hostetter and mechanic and sidekick George McDonald are ready to take on the fi eld of soapbox racers in car Number 1. BOTTOM A root beer fl oat made by the VFW gets serious attention from Delaney Bronson. 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