Mmm, Arizona...

Aurora Black

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Dry winds hinder Arizona firefighters

'We need some rain in the worst way here'

Monday, June 19, 2006; Posted: 11:29 p.m. EDT (03:29 GMT)


SEDONA, Arizona (AP) -- Fire crews struggled with hot, dry and windy weather Monday as they fought to protect hundreds of homes and businesses from a 1,100-acre wildfire creeping into northern Arizona's scenic Oak Creek Canyon.

The fire started Sunday and spread quickly, forcing the evacuation of about 400 homes and businesses in the narrow canyon and about 100 homes in five subdivisions on the rugged north side of Sedona.

"We need some rain in the worst way here and our monsoons aren't due to start 'til after July 4, it's been my experience. So, pray for rain," said Serge Wright, an optometrist whose home wasn't one of those that was evacuated.

The temperature rose into the upper 90s by early afternoon, with a forecast of single-digit humidity and 10 to 20 mph wind.

By early afternoon, flames had edged about 300 feet below the rim of the canyon in spots and were about a half-mile from some homes, said Connie Birkland, a spokeswoman for fire crews. No buildings had been damaged yet. (Watch massive cloud of smoke -- 1:10)

Birkland said the estimate of the burned area had been reduced from 3,000 acres to about 1,100 after more precise mapping during the day. Authorities believe the blaze started in a camp used by transients.

Oak Creek Canyon, more than 90 miles north of Phoenix, holds scattered homes, hotels, resorts and stores.

Helge Zipprich, who lives in a mobile home in Oak Creek Canyon, said he and his three sons were in Sedona on Sunday and didn't have time to return home for any of their belongings. He said the worst part was not knowing what was happening.

"If the fire does spread and gets my home, I wouldn't know," he said.

The fire ignited in a wooded area and quickly led to the evacuations in the Sedona subdivisions of Cibola Hills, Rim Shadows, Painted Cliff, Shadow Rock Circle and Casa Contenta. Evacuations followed in Oak Creek Canyon, between Sedona and Flagstaff.

In neighboring New Mexico, three fires started by lightning had burned almost 24,000 acres in the tinder-dry Gila National Forest in the southwestern part of the state.

The biggest of the three had charred nearly 11,000 acres and threatened 150 homes in the Lake Roberts area. Residents will be allowed to return Tuesday, said fire information officer Shayna Carney.

In southern Colorado, another wildfire grew to more than 500 acres Monday, prompting officials to urge evacuations of the 246 homes in two rural subdivisions and close a highway in Costilla County, about 150 miles south of Denver.

Wildfires have burned more than 3.1 million acres nationwide so far this year, well ahead of the average of about 900,000 acres by this time, the National Interagency Fire Center reported Monday.

Huge grass fires that swept Texas and Oklahoma this spring account for a large part of this year's acreage.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
Well the gosling and I are in eastern Phoenix, no problems here for us, but we've been keeping an eye on the fires.

Tom Collins is up in Flagstaff, not sure about anyone else.

And yes, we need rain in the worst possible way. I've never wanted rain so much in my life.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, Texas and Lousiana, specifically Houston are suffering flooding, 10 inches of rain in one session. This is just bizarre.

Texas flooding
 
matriarch said:
Well the gosling and I are in eastern Phoenix, no problems here for us, but we've been keeping an eye on the fires.

Tom Collins is up in Flagstaff, not sure about anyone else.

And yes, we need rain in the worst possible way. I've never wanted rain so much in my life.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, Texas and Lousiana, specifically Houston are suffering flooding, 10 inches of rain in one session. This is just bizarre.

Texas flooding

That's very odd.
 
Rain, rain
Come today
Stay a while
Don't go away


From what I've heard on the news Flagstaff is a foot behine the precipitation level that we should have had by this time of the year. We got next to no snow this last winter and that's our prime sourse of auquifer replentishment because the rain tends to run away too quickly to be fully absorbed.

The Oak Creek fire, well, from what I hear there's more than 200 structures in the potential path of that blaze and they don't know if they're gonna be able to stop it.

They did manage to get the Woody fire put out. That's the one that was burning last week and threatening my home. These last two fires, Oak Creek and another which I can't recall the name of have been a goodly distance from me and would have to take out the whole town to get to me but I'm still concerned for the people who could lose their homes and businesses.

What we need right now is about two solid weeks of constant, heavy drizzle. It would be coming down fast enough to soak everything but not so fast that it couldn't be absorbed by the ground and help to replenish the aquifer.


I heard on the radio on the way home this morning that they're going to be closing the recreational facilities. All the camp grounds, hiking/nature trails, the cinder hills, everything. Apparently taking this step in the past has significantly reduced human caused, wild/forest fires in the past and I have to say that I think it's a very good idea.

That's my tupence on the subject.
 
I lived in the Phoenix area for 7 years. None of this is news to me, I'll admit. There were always fires, particularly when the heat and dryness got to be extreme.
 
Aurora Black said:
Mat, Min & Tom: Be careful. :rose:
No worries about Mat & Min. Unlike Tom, we're nowhere near any wildfire danger, too surrounded by asphalt and concrete for many miles before you get to anything real and natural. (Not that I'm not constantly paranoid about house fires, but that's just a phobia thing :rolleyes: )
 
Well, it's raining to beat hell up here in AK. If you want it, you can have it.
 
frozen_north said:
Well, it's raining to beat hell up here in AK. If you want it, you can have it.
Phoenix has had 1.56 inches of rain so far this year and the high country hasn't fared much better. We'll take it.
 
minsue said:
Phoenix has had 1.56 inches of rain so far this year and the high country hasn't fared much better. We'll take it.

We've had somewhere in the vicinity of 60" thus far, you want it, it's yours.
Going once; going twice...SOLD to the lady with the sunburnt goose.
 
I lived in Phoenix for three years, and I was never so happy to leave a place in my life. I just ain't the desert type.

There's a whole lot of good people there, but the desert sucks.
 
Wildcard Ky said:
I lived in Phoenix for three years, and I was never so happy to leave a place in my life. I just ain't the desert type.

There's a whole lot of good people there, but the desert sucks.
No...it blows. The fucking wind almost never stops, man. :rolleyes:
 
I have traveled through Arizona and greatly admired many of its people and landscapes, especially Monument Valley and a certain group of girls who work out of Glendale. Therefore I send my deepest hopes and prayers that the great state will stay safe and will soon get the rain it needs. Ditto for the great states of Colorado (where my Dad lives), New Mexico (my past home), and Texas (my current home). And everywhere else with tragic destructive fires.
 
Here in West Palm we are still well short of our yearly norms. (Something like six inches below normal so far this year.)

The good news is the brush fires have gone down quite a bit.

The bad news is we were this low the last two years and Momma Nature decided to make it up to us. Unfortunately she did so with Hurricanes.

Cat
 
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