Showing posts with label drought. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drought. Show all posts

21 June 2022

June Twenty-Oneth

Good morning, all.

It's the summer solstice, which is a big deal up here. With some 24 hours of visible light, the mid-summer activities are in full swing. 

In Fairbanks, 300 miles farther north, the annual Solstice baseball game will throw its first pitch at midnight (go figure!). 

North of the Arctic Circle, some 500 miles from here, the sun will not set. In Fairbanks, 200 miles south of the Circle, the sun barely sets. Here in the greater Anchorage area, we'll have about 90 minutes of dusk between 2:15 and 3:45, when the sun begins rising again. The sun dips just below the horizon, but it's not very far away.

There are sports events, walks, meetings, and various other gatherings to commemorate the longest day. It's what we wait for all year: dreaming about summer's long days helps keep us going through the short (5 hrs or less) days in December. 

And wonder of wonders, it's to be sunny today. Too often, it's completely overcast when we need clear skies the most.

* * * * *

We're having one of the driest summers on record, despite how green everything looks. The heavy snows left water down deep where the tree roots drink, but the ground vegetation getting brittle. And the Department of Conservation reports that over 1,000,000 acres have burned already. I'm guessing that won't make the evening news anywhere else. 

And now for some fun: Two Alaskan pilots recently completed an old-time aviation adventure of their own. Dr. Michael McNamara and Mark Barker picked up a 1929 Travel Air in Kenosha, Wisconsin. What followed was a seven-day trip flying the open cockpit biplane back to Alaska. It sounds like a grand adventure but it had to take some courage too.

25 July 2019

Over Two Million Acres

Fires expand in Alaska, now total over 2 million acres

Rainy Pass Fire (Photo by Alaska Division of Forestry Air Attack)

ANCHORAGE (KTUU) - The acres burned by wildfires in Alaska has now exceeded 2 million after dry weather in the past 48 hours caused many Southwest fires to expand.
Yesterdays conflagrations puts the total acreage at an estimated 2,056,337.5.
Among the biggest jumps was the Smith Creek Fire, which grew from about 12,000 acres to 53,108 acres, causing the evacuation of Donlin Gold mine on Tuesday. Managers there used heavy equipment to create a control line and conducted firing operations to defend the 80 structures in the area.
Over 10,000 lightning strikes in Southwest added six new fires to the 585 now recorded in the state this year. In Southwest Alaska alone, about 410,000 acres are burning.
The Lost Jack Fire (previously called the Salmonberry Fire) is one of the top priorities in Southwest. Eighteen smokejumpers and six helitack personnel are at work fighting the fire, which is only about 100 acres, but which is only three miles north of Nikolai, a village of about ninety people.

ANCHORAGE (KTUU) - The burn ban continues in Anchorage despite the city getting some light rain Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. According to John See with the Anchorage Fire Department, the burn ban continues because the fuels—particularly beneath the tree canopy—remain dry. Basically, it will take more rain to dampen those fuels.
Though the clouds will stick around for most of the week, little rain is in the forecast.
Anchorage received .35 inches of rain during the overnight storm. This means the city has received .42 inches of rain for the month. The average by this point in July is 1.32 inches of rain. The last time Anchorage saw more than .1 inches of rain in a day was May 26, 2019.
The storm last night produced rain across most of Southcentral. Palmer and Wasilla each saw .8 inches of rain. Iliamna saw the most in Southcentral with 1.24 inches of rain. Kenai received .28 inches of rain.
US Fish and Wildlife Service, US Forest Service, and National Parks Service lifted campfire restrictions in the Kenai Peninsula area Wednesday.