Split Ditch Fire burns hundreds of acres in southern New Jersey

The fire is expected to grow to 1,500 acres

Map Split Ditch Fire
Map of the Split Ditch Fire, April 9, 2020. New Jersey Forest Fire Service.

(Updated at 9:16 p.m. EDT April 9, 2020)

The Split Ditch Fire in southern New Jersey has burned approximately 250 acres 4 miles southwest of the Millville Executive Airport and 12 miles south of Vineland.

“Crews are making an indirect attack utilizing existing fuel breaks and county roads,” said Micheal Achey of the New Jersey Forest Fire Service. “The fire is estimated to be 1,500 acres by the time of containment. Firing operations will continue until morning.”

The blaze has been pushed by winds out of the west-northwest gusting above 40 mph per hour with relative humidity in the high 20s and temperature in the high 50s.

Wind speed Thursday afternoon at Millville Municipal Airport
Wind speed Thursday afternoon at Millville Municipal Airport, NJ.

The Split Ditch Fire is being fought by 30 personnel on 10 Type 6 engines, 4 dozers, and one UH-1H helicopter operated by the state.


(UPDATE at 11:18 a.m. EDT April 10, 2020)

Lion Fire burns more than 200 acres near Meeker, Colorado

Lion Fire
Lion Fire. Photo by Rio Blanco Co. Sheriff’s Office April 7, 2020.

The Lion Fire burned 229 acres near Lions Canyon Road 1.5 miles west of Meeker, Colorado on Tuesday. After being reported at about 1:30 p.m., it was attacked by the Meeker Volunteer Fire Department, BLM, and the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control.

By Tuesday evening firefighters had stopped the spread and were expected to be back on Wednesday to mop up.

Investigators determined that it started near a mobile home which was consumed in the fire. Several outbuildings and vehicles were also destroyed, according to Meeker Fire Chief Luke Pelloni.

At Wildfire Today we are giving a trial to a new mapping system created by Orora Technologies. It collects fire detection data from a growing list of satellites, eight at last count, and identifies heat generated by fires. On the map below the circles indicate that heat was detected somewhere within the circle. The red line automatically circumscribes a collection of detections, but is probably larger than the actual size of the burned area. In this example the heat was detected by the SUOMI-NPP satellite. We suggested that the size of the red polygon be automatically calculated, and they added it to their things to do list. The company has plans to launch their own satellites which would produce fire data more frequently.

Lion Fire Map Meeker Colorado wildfire
Map showing the approximate location of the Lion Fire 1.5 miles west of Meeker, Colorado. Data from Orora Technologies detected from 2:12 p.m. MDT April 7, to 2:30 a.m. MDT April 8, 2020.

Elevated radiation levels detected near wildfires in Chernobyl exclusion zone

Posted on Categories WildfireTags ,

The nuclear power plant exploded in 1986

Wildfire burning Chernobyl exclusion zone
Wildfire burning in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Photo by Yaroslav Yemelianenko.

Elevated radiation levels have been detected near Ukraine wildfires burning in the exclusion zone around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant that exploded in 1986. People are not allowed to live within 19 miles of the closed facility.

Firefighters were dealing with two fires, one about 12 acres and the other approximately 49 acres, according to the latest size estimates. The smaller one is reportedly under control. More than 100 firefighters were aided by air tankers and helicopters.

On his Facebook page, Yaroslav Yemelianenko, posted a photo of a Geiger counter showing higher than normal radiation levels. At one location the “reading was 2.3 when the normal level is 0.14.”

Wildfire burning Chernobyl exclusion zone
A Geiger counter showing an elevated radiation level at a wildfire burning in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Photo by Yaroslav Yemelianenko.

Police arrested a person suspected of starting one of the fires, a 27-year-old man from the area who reportedly told police he had set grass and rubbish on fire in three places “for fun”. After he had lit the fires, he said, the wind had picked up and he had been unable to extinguish them.

Wildfire burning Chernobyl exclusion zone
Wildfire burning in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Photo by Yaroslav Yemelianenko.
Wildfire burning Chernobyl exclusion zone
Wildfire burning in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Photo by Yaroslav Yemelianenko.

Dozers built fireline through 3,500 burning rental cars

The catastrophe may have been an indirect effect of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over 7,300 unused rental cars were stored in a grassy field.

rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
Behind the firefighter is a pile of cars made as heavy equipment built a fireline to stop the spreading fire. More than 3,500 rental cars burn at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida April 3, 2020. Fort Myers Fire Department photo.

As thousands of rental cars were burning on April 3 in a temporary overflow parking area at the Southwest Florida International Airport (RSW) near Fort Myers, Florida the firefighters were faced with an unprecedented scenario. Should they use dozers to build a fireline through the 7,366 parked cars to create a barrier to stop the fire?

(We first wrote about the 3,516 burned cars on April 4, 2020)

The call came in at about 4:40 p.m. Burning like a wildfire, the blaze was rapidly spreading through a grassy field, a temporary parking area for the rental cars. When the wind pushed the fire through the vehicles parked bumper to bumper in long rows, hundreds of burning cars became thousands. Dark black smoke rose in a convection column that leaned over, pushed over by the wind. A small pyrocumulus cloud formed at the top of the column, a phenomenon usually only seen on very intensely burning wildfires.

rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
A small pyrocumulus cloud forms over the convection column of smoke as over 3,500 rental cars burned at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida. Photo by Sean Tully, April 3, 2020.

“The cars were stored in a location not ordinarily used for any specific purpose”, said Victoria B. Moreland, Director of Communications and Marketing for the airport. “The large number was due to the car rental agencies serving RSW not renting inventory during the peak season due to the current COVID-19 crisis.”

map rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
The arrow points to the location where 3,516 rental cars burned April 3, 2020 at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida. Google Earth/Wildfire Today.

The cars were parked across the road from a gas station in a grassy field southeast of Terminal Access Road which leads to the airport. From photos, it appeared that the grass had at one time been mowed, but not low to the ground like a lawn, it was several inches high. The grass was mostly dead but was just beginning its spring green-up. The grass allowed the fire to spread easily from car to car, but since they were parked so closely together, the fuel (the cars) was continuous in most areas allowing the fire to spread by radiant and convective heat car-to-car.

rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
More than 3,500 rental cars burn at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida April 3, 2020. Fort Myers Fire Department photo.

Firefighters and equipment from at least 11 fire departments arrived to help suppress the fire. Four dozers from the Florida Forest Service worked on the side of the fire that burned into trees and heavier vegetation, building a fireline — scraping the ground bare so that the fire could not spread any further. Helicopters dropped water on the burning cars. The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office reported that one of their Huey helicopters flown by Chief Pilot Shane Engelauf made over 80 water drops on the fire.

helicopter rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
A helicopter drops water as more than 3,500 rental cars burn at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida April 3, 2020. Fort Myers Fire Department photo.

After I saw two photos taken at the scene showing piles of cars two or three layers deep and stacked at random angles, I began making inquiries to ask if dozers had been used to build a fireline through the parked cars in an attempt to separate the burning cars from the unburned cars, possibly sacrificing some undamaged cars in the process as they worked the big machines near the advancing flames.

A similar tactic was used at an automobile wrecking yard April 1 in Kern County, California when an intense fire was burning through piles of crushed cars. (see photo below)

Mojave Incident 4-1-2020 Kern Co FD
A dozer builds a fireline through crushed cars as a fire burns in a wrecking yard in Kern County, California April 1, 2020. Kern County FD photo.

Tracy W. Young, Chief of Aircraft Rescue and Firefighting at the airport told us that heavy equipment was in fact used to stop the spread of the fire.

“Tomahawk Construction and Port Authority provided heavy equipment (front end loaders) which were used to push cars and create a fire break,” Chief Young told us. “Because the fire was so large, the strategy was to create a fire line flanking the fire and in front of the fire’s head to prevent further spread. Fire Crash apparatus [trucks] and numerous other fire apparatus were used to protect the heavy equipment as they moved cars. ”

rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
A pile of cars made as heavy equipment built a fireline to stop the spreading fire. More than 3,500 rental cars burned at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida April 3, 2020. Andres West / News-Press photo.

The tactic to use dozers or heavy equipment was successful, saving more than half of the cars. The firefighters worked on the fire into the night and it was out the next day.

“This fire was particularly unique as it was found in ample open space, close to thick brush,” said Fort Myers Beach Fire Department Executive Assistant Chief Ron Martin. “This open space and wind conditions served to fuel the fire, and crews (needed) to contend with a wildland fire and several thousand cars that were on fire.”

The final tally:

  • 3,516 cars were damaged or destroyed;
  • 3,850 were saved.

This fire, or at least the scope it it, may have been an indirect effect of the COVID-19 pandemic. With tourism and air travel brought to a near standstill the rental car agencies at the Southwest Florida International Airport suddenly found themselves with over 7,300 cars that could not be parked in their paved parking lots near the terminal. Placing them bumper-to-bumper over dead grass created an environment that made a fire, once started, difficult to access and suppress as it spread in the grass and moved from car to car.

rental cars burn fire Fort Myers Airport
More than 3,500 rental cars burn at Southwest Florida International Airport at Fort Myers, Florida April 3, 2020. Fort Myers Fire Department photo.

Two wildfires in the Pisgah National Forest in NC burn 80 acres

Map Cals Creek Fire wildfire north carolina
Map showing the flight path of a Cessna 185 operated by the State of North Carolina orbiting the area of the Cals Creek Fire east of Otto, NC.

About 65 firefighters are working to suppress two wildfires in North Carolina that have burned a total of 80 acres.

U.S. Forest Service firefighters are responding to two significant fires, including the Camp Daniel Boone Fire that has burned into the Shining Rock Wilderness on the Pisgah National Forest.

The fire started on private property off Little East Fork Rd. in Haywood County Friday afternoon, April 3 and has spread into the Shining Rock Wilderness Area on the Pisgah Ranger District of Pisgah National Forest. It has burned 50 acres near the Art Loeb Trail west of Deep Gap. Approximately 40 firefighters are responding from the North Carolina Forest Service and U.S. Forest Service. NC Forest Service helicopters and air tankers made multiple water drops yesterday to try to slow the spread. A U.S. Forest Service helicopter is on scene again today. The northern Art Loeb and Little East Fork trailheads are closed due to the fire and hiking to Deep Gap or the peak of Cold Mountain is discouraged.

The Cals Creek Fire is burning east of Highway 23/441 in Macon County near Otto, NC. The 30-acre fire started on private property and is now also burning on U.S. Forest Service land in the Nantahala Ranger District of the Nantahala National Forest. Approximately 25 firefighters from the NC Forest Service and U.S. Forest Service are responding. A NC Forest Service helicopter was used for water drops yesterday.

The causes of both fires are under investigation.

State and Federal firefighters responded to multiple additional wildfire starts across Western NC yesterday. U.S. Forest Service firefighters also responded to a small fire on the Uwharrie National Forest in the NC Piedmont.

Fire danger is expected to remain high through the weekend. The North Carolina Forest Service issued a ban on all open burning for 32 Western North Carolina counties due to hazardous forest fire conditions. The burning ban goes went into effect at 5 p.m. Friday, April 3, 2020, and will remain in effect until further notice.

Explosive target at gender reveal party turns into 10-acre wildfire

Sawmill Fire
File photo of the Sawmill Fire in Arizona, early in the morning on April 24, 2017. It was caused by an exploding target. Photo by Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management.

From CNN, April 4, 2020:

A gender reveal party in Florida went wrong and sparked a 10-acre fire, CNN affiliate WESH reported. Firefighters were called to a home in Brevard County, Florida, last weekend after reports that a blaze was possibly ignited by fireworks, fire officials said. But when they arrived, firefighters realized some explosives had been in the mix.

“We were informed that it was caused by a gender reveal using Tannerite and a weapon,” Brevard County Fire Rescue Chief Mark Schollmeyer told WESH. Tannerite is a highly explosive substance often used as a rifle target.

The county had been under a burn ban, including outdoor activities such as campfires, bonfires and trash burning, because of the dry conditions in the region. The order comes with a fine of up to $500. It’s unclear whether anyone faced a fine.

A gender reveal party in Arizona in 2017 ignited the 46,000-acre Sawmill Fire when an off-duty Border Patrol agent shot a Tannerite explosive target. The agent pleaded guilty and was ordered to make an initial payment of $100,000, then make monthly payments after that. According to the Arizona Daily Star and the Green Valley News, he agreed in court to pay $500 a month for the next 20 years, which adds up to $120,000, for a total of $220,000. He was also sentenced to 5 years of probation and agreed to participate in a public service announcement with the U.S. Forest Service concerning the cause of the Sawmill fire.

Exploding targets consist of two ingredients that when mixed by the end user explode when shot by a high-velocity projectile.  After the ingredients are combined, the compound is illegal to transport and is classified as an explosive by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. Exploding targets have caused many fires since they became more popular in recent years, have been banned in some areas, and caused the death of at least one person.