Wildfire(s) Out West

1246725

Comments

  • brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    "My brain's a good brain!"
  • Meltdown99Meltdown99 None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    I agree with that.  I've been to California a few times.  Its not so glamorous anymore.
    Give Peas A Chance…
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    Sadly, Thirty, I think about it often.  That awareness is  especially pronounced having family on my mothers side in California that goes back to the late 1800's and having been born in California myself in 1951 and having lived most of my life here.  The changes that have occurred here in all those years are phenomenal and unsettling.   This is truly paradise lost. 

    And the weird thing is- this state still has this mystique about it that attracts people and they keep thinking this is the place to live.  Honestly, it's not any more.   Most of the state is crowed, expensive, polluted, heavily trafficked, and competition for good neighborhood housing is stiff and only for the wealthy.

    I think governor Brown needs to appoint me as the Official State Unwelcomer, haha!


    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • Meltdown99Meltdown99 None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    Sadly, Thirty, I think about it often.  That awareness is  especially pronounced having family on my mothers side in California that goes back to the late 1800's and having been born in California myself in 1951 and having lived most of my life here.  The changes that have occurred here in all those years are phenomenal and unsettling.   This is truly paradise lost. 

    And the weird thing is- this state still has this mystique about it that attracts people and they keep thinking this is the place to live.  Honestly, it's not any more.   Most of the state is crowed, expensive, polluted, heavily trafficked, and competition for good neighborhood housing is stiff and only for the wealthy.

    I think governor Brown needs to appoint me as the Official State Unwelcomer, haha!


    Is that kind of like "get off my lawn", in your case "get out of my state" ... 
    Give Peas A Chance…
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    Sadly, Thirty, I think about it often.  That awareness is  especially pronounced having family on my mothers side in California that goes back to the late 1800's and having been born in California myself in 1951 and having lived most of my life here.  The changes that have occurred here in all those years are phenomenal and unsettling.   This is truly paradise lost. 

    And the weird thing is- this state still has this mystique about it that attracts people and they keep thinking this is the place to live.  Honestly, it's not any more.   Most of the state is crowed, expensive, polluted, heavily trafficked, and competition for good neighborhood housing is stiff and only for the wealthy.

    I think governor Brown needs to appoint me as the Official State Unwelcomer, haha!


    Is that kind of like "get off my lawn", in your case "get out of my state" ... 
    LOL, yeah, that's it!

    Or better yet, "Welcome!  Enjoy you visit.  Please leave lots of tourist dollars!" 

    [Days later...]

    "OK, visits over.  Now get the hell out of my state!"  :lol:

    Of course, I would  not say that.  But I do find it perplexing that so many people keep moving here.  If it weren't my home state where my family and work and a lot of personal history are, it would be the kind of place I would like to visit, but not move to.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • PJ_SoulPJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 49,473
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    I think that there will eventually be a mass migration out of at least Southern California, as it becomes more and more unlivable because of heat, drought, and fires. Once that happens, and everyone goes north, perhaps California will be able to recover over time and become more of a wilderness again. This isn't good news for the north of course!
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • PJPOWERPJPOWER In Yo Face Posts: 6,499
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    Sadly, Thirty, I think about it often.  That awareness is  especially pronounced having family on my mothers side in California that goes back to the late 1800's and having been born in California myself in 1951 and having lived most of my life here.  The changes that have occurred here in all those years are phenomenal and unsettling.   This is truly paradise lost. 

    And the weird thing is- this state still has this mystique about it that attracts people and they keep thinking this is the place to live.  Honestly, it's not any more.   Most of the state is crowed, expensive, polluted, heavily trafficked, and competition for good neighborhood housing is stiff and only for the wealthy.

    I think governor Brown needs to appoint me as the Official State Unwelcomer, haha!


    Is that kind of like "get off my lawn", in your case "get out of my state" ... 
    LOL, yeah, that's it!

    Or better yet, "Welcome!  Enjoy you visit.  Please leave lots of tourist dollars!" 

    [Days later...]

    "OK, visits over.  Now get the hell out of my state!"  :lol:

    Of course, I would  not say that.  But I do find it perplexing that so many people keep moving here.  If it weren't my home state where my family and work and a lot of personal history are, it would be the kind of place I would like to visit, but not move to.
    The only thing that I have ever wanted to set foot in California for us to visit the Redwoods National Forest.  The overcrowding and pop culture of the cities have never appealed to me.
  • PJ_SoulPJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 49,473
    edited July 2018
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • Meltdown99Meltdown99 None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    We have yet another year with big fire happening outside Yosemite.  Seems to happen every year now.  The Ferguson fire west of the park is at 41,576 acres with 26% containment.  Were in a heat wave with temps in the low 100's (38 to 40 Celsius) which isn't helping matters. 


    Honestly Brian...

    It's kinda sad. California was phenomenal at one point- one of the premier places to live anywhere in the world for a number of reasons.

    As you have stated, it simply cannot sustain the pressure on it that people have placed upon it.

    It'll never be better. Think about that.
    Sadly, Thirty, I think about it often.  That awareness is  especially pronounced having family on my mothers side in California that goes back to the late 1800's and having been born in California myself in 1951 and having lived most of my life here.  The changes that have occurred here in all those years are phenomenal and unsettling.   This is truly paradise lost. 

    And the weird thing is- this state still has this mystique about it that attracts people and they keep thinking this is the place to live.  Honestly, it's not any more.   Most of the state is crowed, expensive, polluted, heavily trafficked, and competition for good neighborhood housing is stiff and only for the wealthy.

    I think governor Brown needs to appoint me as the Official State Unwelcomer, haha!


    Is that kind of like "get off my lawn", in your case "get out of my state" ... 
    LOL, yeah, that's it!

    Or better yet, "Welcome!  Enjoy you visit.  Please leave lots of tourist dollars!" 

    [Days later...]

    "OK, visits over.  Now get the hell out of my state!"  :lol:

    Of course, I would  not say that.  But I do find it perplexing that so many people keep moving here.  If it weren't my home state where my family and work and a lot of personal history are, it would be the kind of place I would like to visit, but not move to.
    Secretary of Stay out my State unless you are spending lots of tourist dollars in a very short time.  Then get out, thanks for your money ... see ya.  

    You should email the governor about a job...lol
    Give Peas A Chance…
  • PJ_SoulPJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 49,473
    edited July 2018
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    Post edited by PJ_Soul on
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • Meltdown99Meltdown99 None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739
    If you are going to San Fran ... book Alcatraz well in advance and make sure you do not miss your time and date.  That happened to me on my San Fran trip ... mixed up the date, and the only way to get a ticket on short notice is show real early where the tickets are sold and hope they have room...I didn't bother going to show up and wait in-line.  The front desk clerk said people start lining up at 4AM ... 

    That was the last time I'll ever go to California ... the congestion is just terrible.  Sequoia was great though!  
    Give Peas A Chance…
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • oftenreadingoftenreading Victoria, BC Posts: 12,821
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    LOL.  Alcatraz always kind of freaked me out.  I would go down to the piers at night back when they were not so touristy- in fact, they were kind of dark and dangerous- and look out at Alcatraz and think, Oh man, that place looks creepy!

    I'm hoping to get to see some of Northern B.C. next year on our way to Alaska.  I kind of romanticize the far North West from reading Jack London, etc.  But of course, reality could be quite different!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • oftenreadingoftenreading Victoria, BC Posts: 12,821
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    LOL.  Alcatraz always kind of freaked me out.  I would go down to the piers at night back when they were not so touristy- in fact, they were kind of dark and dangerous- and look out at Alcatraz and think, Oh man, that place looks creepy!

    I'm hoping to get to see some of Northern B.C. next year on our way to Alaska.  I kind of romanticize the far North West from reading Jack London, etc.  But of course, reality could be quite different!
    It was great..... provided you were fond of pulp mill effluent. 
     
    my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    LOL.  Alcatraz always kind of freaked me out.  I would go down to the piers at night back when they were not so touristy- in fact, they were kind of dark and dangerous- and look out at Alcatraz and think, Oh man, that place looks creepy!

    I'm hoping to get to see some of Northern B.C. next year on our way to Alaska.  I kind of romanticize the far North West from reading Jack London, etc.  But of course, reality could be quite different!
    It was great..... provided you were fond of pulp mill effluent. 
     
    As long as they aren't paper mills.  I live on the Olympic Peninsula for a few years and had to pass a paper mill any time I went to Port Townsend and that mill found it cheaper to pay the fines than to put proper filtration on their smoke stacks.   The smell was nauseating!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • oftenreadingoftenreading Victoria, BC Posts: 12,821
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    LOL.  Alcatraz always kind of freaked me out.  I would go down to the piers at night back when they were not so touristy- in fact, they were kind of dark and dangerous- and look out at Alcatraz and think, Oh man, that place looks creepy!

    I'm hoping to get to see some of Northern B.C. next year on our way to Alaska.  I kind of romanticize the far North West from reading Jack London, etc.  But of course, reality could be quite different!
    It was great..... provided you were fond of pulp mill effluent. 
     
    As long as they aren't paper mills.  I live on the Olympic Peninsula for a few years and had to pass a paper mill any time I went to Port Townsend and that mill found it cheaper to pay the fines than to put proper filtration on their smoke stacks.   The smell was nauseating!
    Pulp and paper, the bedrock of northern B.C.  
    my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf
  • PJ_SoulPJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 49,473
    edited July 2018
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    LOL.  Alcatraz always kind of freaked me out.  I would go down to the piers at night back when they were not so touristy- in fact, they were kind of dark and dangerous- and look out at Alcatraz and think, Oh man, that place looks creepy!

    I'm hoping to get to see some of Northern B.C. next year on our way to Alaska.  I kind of romanticize the far North West from reading Jack London, etc.  But of course, reality could be quite different!
    It was great..... provided you were fond of pulp mill effluent. 
     
    As long as they aren't paper mills.  I live on the Olympic Peninsula for a few years and had to pass a paper mill any time I went to Port Townsend and that mill found it cheaper to pay the fines than to put proper filtration on their smoke stacks.   The smell was nauseating!
    There are paper mills too (unless they all shut down since I was last there, which is possible).
    My own feelings about the BC northwest is basically that it can be very beautiful, just amazing forested wilderness as far as the eye can see and beyond - the kind of place you could wander into and never been seen again, lol. Plus the occasional quaint and charming little place you happen upon, the occasional novelty, such as a completely random snow mobile museum on the side of the road and shit like that ... And some pretty crappy mill towns that really fucking stink, and now lots of brown, dead trees due to pine beetle, which harms a lot of the views unfortunately. It's a great place, but you might not want to romanticize it very much because that could lead to some disappointment.
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    brianlux said:
    PJ_Soul said:
    I wouldn't mind visiting San Francisco once - such a historical place that's not broiling hot. I wouldn't be caught dead in Southern California though.
    Coming from the Bay Area, I'm biased but I try not to put down southern California to much.  That area has produced so much great film and music- for that alone it deserves recognition.  But I don't have any desire to visit So Cal any time soon.

    If you haven't been to San Francisco, I would highly recommend doing so.  It has gone through changes since the years I lived in or near the city, but it still has so much going for it.  If you ever do plan a visit, let me know.   We make day trips down there from time to time.  You might like seeing some of the popular tourists spots but there are also lesser known parts of the city that are very much worth seeing.  I'm also more of a fan of S.F. off season and on week days.
    I wasn't putting down Southern California for anything other than the climate. I hate that climate, and of course the results of it, which is drought and fire.

    Yeah, someday I'll probably swing through San Fran. Actually, I did go there as a very little kid, but I have no memory of it. Just a photo.
    I don't tend to go to popular tourist spots at all because I don't like the whole tourist trap vibe usually. I managed to go on a trip to NYC and didn't see the Statue of Liberty and didn't even consider paying money to go up the Empire State Building, haha. ;) My main interest when travelling is indeed history. Any little historical museum or building or church is where I'll be found! All that said though, I would still like to visit Alcatraz. I know it's a crazy tourist location, and I think expensive too, but old prisons with a rich history simply fascinate me too much to pass that one up.
    I like your style of visiting places.  Very cool.

    Ironically, having grown up in the Bay Area and living in San Francisco itself for four years, I've never been to Alcatraz.  Go figure!
    I wish I could say i grew up somewhere fantastic and was too cool to go see the sights, but in  reality I grew up in northern B.C. and we didn’t even have a mall until I was in junior high! :lol: 
    LOL.  Alcatraz always kind of freaked me out.  I would go down to the piers at night back when they were not so touristy- in fact, they were kind of dark and dangerous- and look out at Alcatraz and think, Oh man, that place looks creepy!

    I'm hoping to get to see some of Northern B.C. next year on our way to Alaska.  I kind of romanticize the far North West from reading Jack London, etc.  But of course, reality could be quite different!
    It was great..... provided you were fond of pulp mill effluent. 
     
    As long as they aren't paper mills.  I live on the Olympic Peninsula for a few years and had to pass a paper mill any time I went to Port Townsend and that mill found it cheaper to pay the fines than to put proper filtration on their smoke stacks.   The smell was nauseating!
    There are paper mills too (unless they all shut down since I was last there, which is possible).
    My own feelings about the BC northwest is basically that it can be very beautiful, just amazing forested wilderness as far as the eye can see and beyond - the kind of place you could wander into and never been seen again, lol. Plus the occasional quaint and charming little place you happen upon, the occasional novelty, such as a completely random snow mobile museum on the side of the road and shit like that ... And some pretty crappy mill towns that really fucking stink, and now lots of brown, dead trees due to pine beetle, which harms a lot of the views unfortunately. It's a great place, but you might not want to romanticize it very much because that could lead to some disappointment.
    That's what I was afraid of.  The pine beetle plague is wreaking havoc on forest all across the west.   

    I wonder how many centuries before things come back into balance?  I do believe in the power of nature to restore balance.

    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • tbergstbergs Posts: 9,195
    edited July 2018
    Ugh, two firemen died battling a blaze in Redding this morning. Our continued environmental impact on these areas coupled with the unrealistic livability of these geographical regions we keep building in is just never going to end until it all burns or we die off. Realistically, it will probably be a combination of the two.
    Northern California wildfire moves into Redding

    Post edited by tbergs on
    It's a hopeless situation...
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    tbergs said:
    Ugh, two firemen died battling a blaze in Redding this morning. Our continued environmental impact on these areas coupled with the unrealistic livability of these geographical regions we keep building in is just never going to end until it all burns or we die off. Realistically, it will probably be a combination of the two.
    Northern California wildfire moves into Redding

    Oh, that's terrible news.  This is a bad one.  44,450 acres and only 3% containment.  Redding used to be this really small town at the far north end of the central valley and for some crazy reason a lot of people have moved there (the place has a lengthy hell-hole of a summer- why anyone wants to live there is beyond me other than maybe it's proximity to Mt. Shasta and the Shasta reservoir.

    We still have the worst 8 to 10 weeks of fire season ahead of us and already the place is going to hell.  Ubiquitous haze or smoke combined with temps in the low 100's.  Welcome to paradise.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    Looking at these fire maps of the Carr fir,  I'm almost in shock.  A major portion of Redding is on the west side of the I-5.



    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    The Carr fire nearly doubled to over 80,000 acres over night.  I don't recall ever hearing of a fire move this quickly.  And still only 5% contained.  :frowning:


    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • Meltdown99Meltdown99 None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739
    brianlux said:
    The Carr fire nearly doubled to over 80,000 acres over night.  I don't recall ever hearing of a fire move this quickly.  And still only 5% contained.  :frowning:


    Thats terrible Brian.  In Ontario we are having a bad fire season as well.  Been very dry, not the worst summer for heat.  Just a lack of rain.  My front yard is harder than cement.
    Give Peas A Chance…
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    brianlux said:
    The Carr fire nearly doubled to over 80,000 acres over night.  I don't recall ever hearing of a fire move this quickly.  And still only 5% contained.  :frowning:


    Thats terrible Brian.  In Ontario we are having a bad fire season as well.  Been very dry, not the worst summer for heat.  Just a lack of rain.  My front yard is harder than cement.
    Sorry to hear that, Meltdown.  Fall can't come too soon this year!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    Sorry in advance if this sound like a whine or self-pity.  I know a lot of others are dealing with far worse.  It's just that I've never seen so much far-reaching smoke-haze in all my years. ((I posted a photo with the camera pointed at the setting sun on the AET sunset thread.  You can't tell there's a sun in that photo due to the haze and smoke.)  And the intensity with which some of these fires are taking off this year!  In Redding, some of those people had only two minutes warning to clear out.  Some didn't make it.  The threat of earthquakes when I lived in San Francisco never bothered me much- very little in fact.  But this is way different and the odds are not good... things feel dicey as shit.  I can't wait for fall, damn it!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • unsungunsung I stopped by on March 7 2024. First time in many years, had to update payment info. Hope all is well. Politicians suck. Bye. Posts: 9,487
    Gotta admit I haven’t read all replies...but maybe start the selective logging again?
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    unsung said:
    Gotta admit I haven’t read all replies...but maybe start the selective logging again?
    It never stopped.  Logging goes on all the time here.  Getting rid of the trees is not a solution.  They are being logged as it is, both healthy trees (to a lesser degree) and salvage cutting in areas that have burned. 

    Environmentalists never opposed all cutting.  We have mainly opposed cutting old growth trees and trees close to riparian habitat. There is even logging planned for Redwood National Park and other redwood forests which has been proposed by environmentalists.  The plan is to restore natural conditions (an imbalance previously caused by over-logging) and to reduce competition for sunlight and water.   But those areas are in the north-west part of the state which is much more moist and sees much less fire anyway. 

    The fire problems we are seeing in recent years is due to a combination of:

    -Many previous years of fire suppression.  Control burns happen every year when it is safe to do so but only in recent decades.  Previously, rather than control burn, the USFS did everything it could to put out even small fires. Mother Nature used to maintain a balance here with natural fire caused by lightening strikes which kept vegetation down in drier areas, reducing what is referred to as the "fire ladder".  That natural process was suppressed for about 100 years.

    -Bark beetle infestation is killing literally millions of trees.  Drought is the main reason the bark and other pine beetles are killing off the trees.

    -Ecological imbalance s caused by overpopulation, pollution and climate change.

    Humans have played a huge role in creating the problem by upsetting natural balances.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,592
    It snowed ashes in Placerville today.  Ashes, high heat, ubiquitous smoke.  Living on the edge of the apocalypse.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













Sign In or Register to comment.