I used flightradar.com to follow a helicopter just now. It sucked water up from Crystal Lake and dropped it on the ridge about half a mile south of the 39.
8pm Wednesday and not a breath of wind...still. Santa Ana's out my ass are more severe than this supposed event. Last night and this morning they issued evac orders for Monrovia, Sierra Madre, NE Pasadena and Altadena. Crying wolf doesn't help.
Might be easier to get to the Mermaids now with all the brush gone. Triplet on the other hand... some of that brush was essential to use scrambling down some chutes.
Fire final approach to Hwy2/Islip...aka high desert people say 'so thats the bobcat fire'. Fire on Islip ridge from yesterday squashed per FS tweet. Just sayin, cause people get obsessed over red dots or crazy google map for Bobcat. Crystal Lake safe. At least as of this morning. Everything seems to be in order? This basically over tonight?
dima wrote: ↑What twitter feeds you're looking at? The red dots are very accessible and easily interpretable, but not entirely correct sometimes.
#bobcat fire. They post mappingsupport, google.....heres the google map, supposedly updated hourly. https://www.google.com/maps/@34.3193729 ... 11hnw__rgj
Waterman, n of cedar springs burnt, east of Hwy 39. High temps on those red or forget about it. 170 or more, preferably 200+.
Hah. Yeah. How dare they. Something definitely IS going on in that area right now. AIRATT52 is flying back and forth in an arc: Twin Peaks, Waterman, Buckhorn, Islip, Windy Gap
The google map uses GOES-17 which updates every 10 minutes, but googles derived map updates hourly. It's a geostationary satellite so it can monitor the whole west coast continuously (unlike the other infrared sensors VIIRS, Aqua and Terra on sun synchronous orbits which update once daily for us (around 10:30 for Suomi NPP and Aqua and 1:30 for Terra... if I remember correctly). The issue with GOES-17 is the resolution... it's much lower, see here: https://rammb-slider.cira.colostate.edu ... 48&y=10848