Lightning ignites multiple fires in Trinity County, California and prompts evacuations

Monument Fire and McFarland Fire are two of the largest

1:51 p.m. PDT August 2, 2021

Map McFarland Fire
Map of the McFarland Fire. The white line was the perimeter at 12:45 a.m. PDT Aug 2, 2021. The yellow line was the perimeter approximately 24 hours earlier. (scroll down to see a map with a wider view)

The McFarland Fire South of Wildwood, California burned intensely Sunday afternoon, spreading two miles to the west and a mile south. A mapping flight at 12:45 a.m. Monday showed it had consumed about 5,000 additional acres in the previous 24 hours to bring the total to approximately 7,400 acres. It moved a little closer to Highway 36 and during the flight was about three-quarters of a mile south of the highway.

The Shasta-Trinity National Forest reported on their Facebook page Monday at noon that overnight “the fire spotted three miles to the west around Hell To Find Lake.” We confirmed with FS, “A spot fire occurred three miles west of the main fire?” and they said yes.

On Monday the fire became established in the upper headwaters of Beegum Canyon, with tree torching, spotting and rollout in the steep terrain. Fixed wing air tankers made retardant drops to slow fire spread and allow ground resources the opportunity to construct containment hand lines in some areas along the fire perimeter.

McFarland Fire
McFarland Fire. Looking south from the Hayfork2 camera at 9:47 a.m. PDT Aug 2, 2021.

The McFarland Fire is about a mile north of a large fire from 2020, the Hopkins Fire which merged with several other fires to become the Elkhorn Fire. It is a few miles south of the 2008 Telephone Fire and the 2015 Sheill Fire. Two other fires from 2008 are several miles to the east, the Gulch and Noble Fires.

A Type 2 Incident Management Team was expected assume command Sunday night.

Map Monument Fire
Map of the Monument Fire. The white line was the perimeter at 12:10 a.m. PDT Aug. 2, 2021. The yellow line was the perimeter approximately 24 hours earlier. (scroll down to see a map with a wider view)

The Monument Fire two miles west of Big Bar, California was very active Sunday afternoon spreading about a mile to the north, coming close to Highway 299, but it slowed overnight in calmer winds. A mapping flight at 12:10 a.m. Monday determined it had burned 3,114 acres, an increase of about 2,000 acres in approximately 24 hours.

Crews are focusing on building direct containment lines and assessing and preparing structures in Del Loma, Big Bar, and Pattison Ranch.

Evacuation warnings are in effect for these communities. More information can be found at the Trinity County Sheriff’s Office Facebook page.

Highway 299 has been closed intermittently due to active fire behavior and rolling material.

A Type 1 National Incident Management Organization (NIMO) Incident Management Team has been ordered for the incident.

So far, the fire is burning entirely in the footprint of the 2008 Cedar Fire, part of the Iron Complex of fires, and firefighters are opening some of the dozer lines used 13 years ago. Nine firefighters and pilots were killed when a Sikorsky S-61N helicopter crashed while working on the Iron 44 Fire that was part of that complex.

Below is a map showing the fires that have occurred in the area of these two fires, McFarland and Monument, since 2000.

Monument & McFarland Fire history
Monument & McFarland Fires, history of fires in the area since 2000. NIFC.

7:33 p.m. PDT August 1, 2021

Map of the Monument & McFarland Fires
Map of the Monument & McFarland Fires at approximately 3 a.m. PDT Aug 1, 2021.

Lightning on July 29 started more than a half-dozen fires in Northern California’s Trinity County. As of Sunday afternoon two have burned more than 1,000 acres each and prompted evacuations. According to satellite photos and heat data from satellites Sunday afternoon both were very active. Very large smoke plumes were photographed moving north-northwest toward southwest Oregon,

Sunday morning the McFarland Fire, discovered July 31, was south of Cold Creek Road (Highway 36) a mile or two south of Wildwood, California. It is 7 air miles west of Platina, 15 miles southeast of Hayfork, and 38 miles southwest of Redding. At about 6 p.m. the Trinity County Sheriff’s office issued an evacuation order “for the town of Wildwood, CA. Evacuation areas are SR 36 @ Wildwood Road, north on Wildwood Road for 10 miles.”

At 9 a.m. Sunday the Shasta-Trinity National Forest said the McFarland Fire had burned 2,100 acres, but judging from the satellite imagery at 6 p.m. local time it likely has grown substantially since then. A Type 2 Incident Management Team will assume command Sunday night.

Satellite photo Monument & McFarland Fires
Satellite photo of smoke from the Monument & McFarland Fires at 6:31 p.m. PDT Aug 1, 2021. NASA.

The Monument Fire is about 28 air miles northwest of the McFarland Fire. A mapping flight very early Sunday morning showed it was about a half mile south of Highway 299, which is now closed, and about two miles west of Big Bar. The Forest service said the fire’s movement Saturday was primarily to the east. By 2 p.m. Sunday satellite data indicated it had spread north closer to the highway.

Sunday morning the Shasta-Trinity National Forest said the Monument Fire had burned 1,000 acres, but like the McFarland Fire, it has probably also grown substantially since then.

The Trinity County Sheriff’s Office issued evacuation warnings for structures on both sides of the Trinity River near Del Loma along Highway 299 at approximately 10 p.m. Saturday night. A Type 1 National Incident Management Organization (NIMO) Incident Management Team has been ordered for the incident.

McFarland Fire
McFarland Fire, looking south from the Hayfork2 camera at 7:29 p.m. Aug 1, 2021

Video of lightning -struck tree burning is impressive

This video of a lightning-struck tree burning is mesmerizing. Michael Bogan of the University of Arizona filmed it July 31 in Southern California near Big Bear Lake. The US Forest Service responded, Mr. Bogan said, and suppressed the fire.

Be sure your sound is turned on while viewing it.

A video response to Representative Tom McClintock’s description of wildland firefighters as “unskilled labor”

 fire firefighters wildland wildfire
Still image from the Jack Jones “Unskilled Labor” documentary

When U.S. Rep. Tom McClintock of California called wildland firefighters “unskilled labor”earlier this month it provoked strong responses from the highly trained, professional, tactical athletes who put their bodies on the fireline to protect our citizens and forests.

One of those reacting was Jack Jones who was motivated by the criticism to put together the video he shot last year while serving as a highly skilled firefighter on the Idaho-based Sawtooth Hotshots. The resulting 26-minute documentary is titled, “Unskilled Labor” A Season with the Hotshots.

 fire firefighters wildland wildfire
Still image from the Jack Jones “Unskilled Labor” documentary

The video is the best I have seen that captures what it is like to work with 20 other highly skilled professional firefighters over the course of a fire season — digging fireline, mopping up, firing out, and hiking impossibly steep terrain while carrying heavy loads. Mr. Jones narrates as we see excellent photography of scenes that most people can’t even imagine. It brought me back to the five seasons I spent on Southern California hotshot crews.

Mr. Jones addresses thoroughly the ridiculous comment by Representative McClintock about “unskilled labor”.

The viewer may be left with the conclusion that if the trained and experienced firefighters on Hotshot crews were not skilled, instead of returning home after a fire assignment they could be in a cemetery.

Smoke forecast, 11 pm MDT July 31, 2021

Smoke forecast
Smoke forecast for 11 p.m. MDT July 31, 2021.

For the last couple of days wildfires in Southern British Columbia have been producing large quantities of smoke which has been drifting into Alberta, North-central US, the American Midwest, and points further east. The forecast for Saturday night indicates this trend is continuing.

Clouds have made it difficult for satellites to photograph smoke coming from the Bootleg Fire in Oregon and the Dixie Fire in California.

Satellite photo smoke wildfires British Columbia Montana
Satellite photo showing smoke from fires in BC and Montana at 7:40 p.m. MDT July 30, 2021.

Washington Governor, “Everything we need to fight forest fires is in dire need across the Western United States”

Multiple governors asked President Biden for aerial assets, firefighters, help in obtaining aviation fuel, and aggressive initial attack

Air resources on the Cedar Creek Fire
Aviation resources on the Cedar Creek Fire in Washington, July 29, 2021. InciWeb.

Friday President Biden hosted his second virtual meeting to discuss wildfire preparedness. This session was with the Governors of three western states, Montana, Washington, and California. The earlier meeting on the topic was June 22, 2021.

The Governors told Mr. Biden that their states need more aviation resources, they need help with obtaining aviation fuel, they need more boots on the ground, and they encourage aggressive initial attack.

“Everything we need to fight forest fires is in dire need across the Western United States,” said Governor Jay Inslee of Washington.

These requests, coming from multiple states in late July with the meat of the fire season still possibly on the horizon, are astonishing.

The President began the meeting with a few remarks before asking the three Governors what the Federal government could do to help.

“Our resources are already being stretched to keep up,” Mr. Biden said.  “We need more help, particularly when we also factor in the additional nationwide challenges of pandemic-related supply chain disruptions and our ongoing efforts to fight COVID. We’ve had a few COVID clusters at our fire camps, which further limits resources.  It’s just one more reason why it’s so darn important that everyone get vaccinated, I might add. Sadly, we’ve also lost two brave firefighters in the last month in a plane crash in Arizona, and five were seriously injured last week battling the Devil’s Creek fire in Montana. It’s — to state the obvious, and you governors know it better than anybody — it is really, really dangerous work, and it takes incredible bravery to do it.  And these heroes deserve to be paid — and paid well — for their work.  That’s why, last month, I was able to announce — and it’s not paying that well, in my view, to be honest with you — immediate action to make all federal firefighters making at least $15 an hour.  I think they deserve more than that. We’re also working with Congress to make sure that our firefighters are paid better permanently.  Permanently.”

Governor Greg Gianforte of Montana was called on first. He spoke briefly, saying that aggressive initial attack was important. “Without that commitment,”Governor Gianforte said,  “we would have had many more large scale fires. And we ask that our federal partners join us in applying this operating principle. Whether it’s a fire that starts on private, state, or federal land — fires are easier to manage when they’re smaller.”

Governor Gianforte then went on to talk about active forest management.

Below are quotes from the other two Governors.

Governor Jay Inslee, Washington

My biggest concern might surprise you because all of the governors share these immediate concerns.  We have a huge need for additional aerial assets, additional dozer bosses so we can get our dozers into fire lines.  We need new tra- — more trained people.  We do have an emerging concern about our fuel supply for our aerial assets.  Everything we need to fight forest fires is in dire need across the Western United States, not just in Washington State.  We’ve had a thousand fires.  It’s burned four times more at this time of year than normal.  We’ve had two and a half times more acreage burn in the last decade than the previous.

Governor Gavin Newsom, California

Look, I just want to briefly — because there’s so many of us — a quick update.  We’re blowing past every record, and not in a good way.  We’re at over 5,700 fires year-to-date.  We suppressed 59 just yesterday with some initial attacks.  Over half a million acres already burned in California. To put in perspective — a record-breaking year.  Last year, we were at 130,000 acres burned.  We’re at 504,000 as I speak to you today.

Here’s the answer to your question.  And forgive me for being so pointed again, respecting your time, but I want to be a little bit more specific. Jay referenced it obliquely.  Please pay attention to this fuels issue.  We had to get our National Guard to get some emergency fuel supplies for our aerial fleet a week ago.  This is a major issue, and it’s not just impacting our aerial suppression strategies on the West Coast.  It’s increasingly, as you may know, impacting commercial aviation.  It is a major issue.

Number two, we just simply need more boots on the ground.  We can’t do without you.  We’ve got 7,400 people — 7,400 already.  We’re not in fire season.  Fire season in California is late September, October, into November.  We’re in July.  We already have 7,400 personnel actively working to suppress fires. Last year, the federal government asked us for over 5,000 mutual aid support that we could not provide.  That gives you a sense of what the federal government wanted from California last year to send to other states.  That should give you a sense of how far behind we are with federal support.

We have four DC-10s, Mr. President.  Four.  Now, DC-10s aren’t the answer to every problem.  They don’t fly over 35 knots.  They have restrictions; there are legendary restrictions.  But the reality is there is four for the country, and we’re competing.  They’re all contracted.  We compete with you.  We compete with other states.  We don’t even have access right now to DC-10s. We lost that 747 — that iconic 747 — that now has been converted to a cargo plane.  You’ve seen that in Australia, not just across the West Coast.  That’s now been grounded by a private contractor.

We are the largest civil aviation fleet for firefighting in the world — California.  We do not come close to having the tools in the air that we need.  We need your support to su- — to dramatically increase the aerial support, in addition to boots on the ground.

But here’s the final thing, and it’s the elephant in the room.  I was with Governor Sisolak two days ago in his state of Nevada.  The reason why is we had a fire that was on federal property.  Fifty-seven percent of the forest property in California is federal, just three percent under California jurisdiction.  Three percent.  Fifty-seven percent under U.S. Forest Service.  U.S. Forest Service is spectacular.  We have deep admiration and respect, but there’s a culture that, too often, is, “Wait and see.”  We can’t afford that any longer.  This was a federal fire.  They waited.  And what we saw is the fire took off because we didn’t put enough initial assets.

Greg was making an oblique point here.  I want to be a little bit more explicit: We need your help to change the culture, in terms of the suppression strategies, in this climate, literally and figuratively, to be more aggressive on these federal fires. That fire bled into Nevada and, obviously, impacted not just our two states, but deeply impacted the redundancy of this concern that comes out every year around jurisdictions and incident command and the imperative that we’re all on the same page, in terms of those initial attack strategies.

A Senate infrastructure bill will address many wildland fire issues

The Capitol, Washington, DC
The Capitol, Washington, DC. Photo by Bill Gabbert

A $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill with funding for some wildland fire issues passed an important procedural vote in the Senate Friday that opened up the legislative package to the next phase, potential changes and amendments. In the evenly divided body at least 60 votes are needed for amendments and final passage. It received 66 today which allows it to move forward in the process. The Senate version of the bill is S.2377 – Energy Infrastructure Act.

About 0.3 percent, or approximately $3,369,000,000 in this $1 trillion “small” infrastructure bill is directed at wildland fire. Another infrastructure bill that may spend more than $3 trillion will be considered later.

The $1 trillion version appropriates funds toward a couple of dozen wildland fire issues, most of which are important, but especially a few that have been near and dear to the hearts of Federal firefighters Forestry Technicians for years, especially the creation of a Wildland Firefighter occupational series. This would mean if the bill passes they will no longer be pigeonholed as they are now in a Forestry Technician job description. A bump in salary is also included.

After it made it onto the Senate floor this week things started happening quickly. While amendments can be brought forward, there is hope that the final version could receive a vote in a matter of days, perhaps as early as Sunday August 1. If not then, probably soon thereafter. However, with politicians and legislation anything is possible — or sometimes impossible. After it passes the Senate, then it moves to the House where the outcome is less certain. The politicians and staffers are motivated to do SOMETHING, because they are anxious to leave on their August recess.

The bill authorizes $600 million for management of personnel — those who fight fires.

  • The bill directs OPM to develop a distinct “wildland firefighter” occupational series.
  • The DOI and FS shall convert no fewer than 1,000 seasonal wildland firefighters to wildland firefighters that are full-time, permanent, year-round Federal employees who will reduce hazardous fuels on Federal land for at least 800 hours each year.
  • The base salaries of Federal wildland firefighters will be increased by the lesser of an amount that is commensurate with an increase of $20,000 per year or an amount equal to 50 percent of the base salary.
  • Develop mitigation strategies for wildland firefighters to minimize exposure due to line-of-duty environmental hazards.
  • Establish programs for permanent, temporary, seasonal, and year-round wildland firefighters to recognize and address mental health needs, including care for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Other provisions of the the bill, authorized for fiscal years 2022 through 2026. (M = million)

  • $20M, Satellite fire detection
  • $10M, Radio interoperability
  • $30M, Reverse 911 systems
  • $50M, Slip-on firefighting modules for pickup trucks
  • $100M, Pre-fire planning, and training personnel for wildland firefighting and vegetation treatments
  • $20M, Data management for fuels projects and large fires
  • $20M, Joint Fire Science Program (research)
  • $100M, Planning & implementing projects under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program
  • $500M, Mechanical thinning, timber harvesting, pre-commercial thinning
  • $500M, Wildfire defense grants for at risk communities
  • $500M, Prescribed fires
  • $500M, Constructing fuelbreaks
  • $200M, Remove fuels, produce biochar and other innovative wood products
  • $200M, Post-fire restoration
  • $8M, Firewood banks
  • $10M, Wildfire detection and real-time monitoring equipment

One issue this legislation does not address is the inadequate funding of aerial firefighting, the use of air tankers and helicopters to assist firefighters on the ground by dropping water or retardant to slow the spread of wildfires, which is necessary for Homeland Security. The Federal agencies entered the year with 18 large air tankers and 28 large Type 1 helicopters, when they should have 40 large air tankers and 50 large helicopters on exclusive use 10-year contracts instead of the existing 1-year contracts.