Wind & Fire

Today I have to head over to Simi Valley, where the fire I wrote about yesterday is still burning. Because I have to go there to get a crown fitted, I just checked out the situation online.

It’s called the Sandy Fire, and while still uncontained, a number of back fires have been lit to help do so. The fire is moving south of Simi, into the hilly country of the mountains on the southern edge of the city itself. There are homes here, but because of the nature of the place, it is difficult to build as well as remote. Unfortunately, though, some structures have been lost. Damage to wildlife is not to be dismissed, either, as the hills are home to many critters.

Thomas Fire from the Reagan Library
2017 Thomas Fire taken from the Reagan Library

Above is a photo I took years ago. The fire spread from the mountains to about 20+ miles west to the sea. My in-laws were evacuated from Ventura in the middle of the night. No one thought the fire so far away could spread as fast and fiercely as it did, and in so short of time.

The wind is what is often the most devastating element involved in the fires of Southern California. We get what we call variously “sundowners” and “east winds” and “Santa Ana winds” and “Santanas” – sundowners because as the evening sets in, the cool air from the ocean draws the heated air from inland. East winds because the land is east, the ocean is west. And there are a lot of other reasons for these winds of which I know nothing!

At times, these winds can be over 50 mph. Yesterday’s winds in my area were only 15 mph, but enough to make me uneasy. I always have my nose sniffing out smoke and my ears pricked for sirens. The rugged terrain means chasing fires is very difficult to impossible on foot. Helicopters with fire retardant and water help, but when the wind blows embers ahead of the fire, from mountain top to the next across an arroyo or canyon, the chase is on. It is this element – the embers – which can lead to large and devastating fires and damage.

Ironically, much of California and the west are environments which depend on cycles of fire. Native Americans often used fire to control the fertility of the landscape, and only recently has the Forestry Service begun to use their knowledge. Plants flourish in the burnt land, and many depend on fires for propagation of the next generation of plants. Human settlement disrupts this cycle. Thus, years of dried debris and overgrowth provide fuel. Wet winters giving way to dry summers do this as well.

Today, the winds are down from yesterday. Usually, a light steady prevails in my area, but even that can have its effects. I’ve lived in California most of my life, but I never get used to fires as a normal part of life. I loved the wind until I came fear its effects. Today the Sandy Fire is likely to be contained, but there are fires elsewhere that need attending, and more to come. Fortunately, family and friends offer us places to stay should we need to evacuate, as we have offered them.

Little Environmental Things

With the leak in the Gulf of Mexico becoming increasingly a problem, it draws attention to the environment in a number of ways. Man’s footprint becomes more destructive as world population continues to grow.  Global warming continues because of the fact there are too many people and countries who cannot work together to help the entire planet.  Politically and realistically, this is not possible.

Plants and animals are threatened by pollution, by being unable to survive in their current environment because the mean temperature is a few degrees warmer – C or F – than it has been traditionally. People are also threatened by the work of other people and corporations in areas before them.

Man-made Disasters

Santa Susana Plant Area in the Simi Valley

Nearby, we have the Santa Susana Field Laboratory.  Nuclear waste and toxic chemicals have leached into the soil and water table.  This affects people living nearby – what is the house built on?  What is in my drinking water?  People who worked there are facing the long-term affects of having worked there – some have died, some are ill, some have not a problem.  Now they might get some help.

In the city of Carson, CA, in the Carousel housing track, developed in the late 1960s, another Love Canal is brewing.

1969 Clean Up from the Santa Barbara Oil Spill

You can still find tar on the local beaches from the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill.

Worldwide we can remember the Bhopal gas leak, the London smog disaster of 1952, and too many others to count.  Googling “man made natural disasters” gives a lot of stuff.

Endangered Animals

Lizards are disappearing in areas they normally survive.  So are frogs, bats, and honey bees. Africa is home to many species which are endangered by the spread of population, commercialized and illegal big game hunting, and the search for ivory or strange aphrodisiacs.  Penguins and polar bears are also suffering.  And so are indigenous peoples in face of political and commercial expansion.

Foreign Plants

Kudzu

Kudzu has been found to be taking over parts of the the U.S.  This is a plant imported from Asia to help cut down on erosion in the American South.  This plant is highly invasive.    Now, a study shows that it helps increase pollution for all sorts of reasons.  More details can be found here.

Invasive Species

Besides invasive plants, invasive animal species threaten much of our environment.  The Everglades faces a growing predatory snake population.  Boo, hiss.

You’ve Seen a Redwood . . .

Unfortunately, politicians and others in power often have little knowledge or appreciation of the natural world.  Ronald Reagan, former California governor and U.S. president was a classical example.  Today, we have the infamous Ms. Palin, who is all too willing to shoot animals from a helicopter and continue oil drilling.

Rain Forest

Think Locally, Act Globally

Peter Vanderwyden.  People in China.  Rainforest Alliance.  Europe.  However, in third world countries, modernization often leads to pollution and destruction of pristine landscapes.  “Thinking Green” may involve far more money to introduce than is in a nation’s budget.  Nonetheless, creative and inexpensive means for providing improvements can and do exist.

Change is neither easy nor comfortable.  Sometimes it is forced on us.  Sometimes we choose it.