(Aozotorp) wrote in message
...
Benign" meaning it hasn't been as bad as two of the last 4 years?
Only about 2 million acres?!?! The bulk of the fire season is still
ahead and massive fires are probable in the coming 2 months. Here on
the Sequoia, where I've been working, we've had a very unusual period
of humid weather with thunderstorms. For a few days it felt like I was
back in the South with 98 degree temps and light rain.
I see! Failure to read for content!
Nah! I did read it all and fully understood the slant underlying the
use of the word "benign". Yep, you folks are trying to convince the
public that hundreds of thousands of acres of high burn intensity is
"normal". That 2 million burned acres at this point in the fire season
is fine and dandy. Ask the people who lost loved ones or property if
this "benign" fire season is a good thing.
Also, are burned National Parks fine with you folks? Whatever happened
to the "let-burn" policy? Are you now in favor of stopping a "natural"
process to "save" all those purty trees? Should we be paying out big
bucks to forestall the inevitable? You folks obviously don't know just
WHAT you want.
Larry, a true environmentalist
Right = and the French Riviera, Canada and most of the rest of Europe have been
compelled to stop sane forestry due to environmentalists = Not!
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L28155924.htm
http://www.news.com.au/common/story_...5E1702,00.html
http://www.iht.com/articles/105115.html
http://technology.nzoom.com/technolo...13-380,00.html
http://technology.nzoom.com/technolo...13-380,00.html
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori.../45643/1/.html
http://www.terradaily.com/2003/03072....uynzo4ee.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/wo...00/3121143.stm
Now let us remember the excerpt I had in the original article:
excerpt:
What's remarkable in Montana, notes Amy Vanderbilt, Glacier Park spokeswoman,
is how fast the forest, dampened by a relatively moist spring, has turned
tinder dry, parched by high temperatures and and breezy, rainless thunderstorms
that bring lightning strikes.
"The kind of fire behavior we're witnessing is different from what we've seen
in the past," says Ms. Vanderbilt, who also worked in Yellowstone during the
1988 fires....