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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Apr 28 2007, 12:22 am
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2007 21:22:40 -0700
Local: Sat, Apr 28 2007 12:22 am
Subject: Super Active Wildfire Season looks likely
*Perilous Times and Global Warming

Super Active Wildfire Season looks likely*

By Patrick O'Driscoll, USA TODAY

DENVER — Fire scientists preparing this year's national wildfire
forecast don't expect much of a reprieve from 2006, the worst fire
season in a half-century.

An above-average year is likely, including more fires in parts of
Southern California not already scorched in recent years, said Rick
Ochoa, fire weather program manager at the National Interagency Fire
Center in Idaho. Potential hotspots could include the Great Basin states
of Nevada and Utah, and Arizona if unpredictable summer monsoons miss
the state.

Those areas are locked in a pattern of widespread dryness, warmer
temperatures and an early melting of mountain snow in the West, Ochoa
said Thursday. He is among about 30 fire experts meeting this week in
Boulder, Colo., to draft the fire outlook. The four-day session ends today.

The forecast is due out on Tuesday.

Although much of the USA may see normal conditions, a continuing worry
now is the Southeast, where severe to extreme drought grips parts of
Alabama, Georgia, Florida and Mississippi. A 61,000-acre blaze in
Georgia has burned for more than 11 days and was only 50% contained
Thursday.

"I would be very surprised if we had a light fire season," said Ochoa,
who sketched out the factors likely to influence the forecast:

•Summer heat. The National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center
sees a warmer-than-usual spring and summer in the West. If that holds
true, "the probability of a big fire season in places like the
Northwest, the Northern Rockies and Idaho is going to go up quite a
bit," Ochoa said.

•Dead forests. Bark beetle infestations continue in Colorado, Idaho and
British Columbia. Dead or dying trees make abundant fuel for fires, but
Ochoa said those trees are more fire-prone in the first year. Needles
still on the branches make trees torches for fires to race through the
treetops.

•"Carry-over" fuels. Ochoa said Nevada has above-normal fire potential
because of "carry-over" grass and brush that sprouted in the wet winters
of 2005 and 2006 and are ready to burn after a dry winter.

•Uncertain monsoons. The annual mid-summer storms in the Southwest
rarely hit Arizona and New Mexico equally, Ochoa said. Arizona needs
moisture, while New Mexico had a decent winter. "It's really tough for
us to call, and it will make a huge difference," Ochoa added. And if the
monsoons are late or weak, fire season could be worse.

•Alaskan temperatures. Fall, winter and spring were dry in the state's
interior. If temperatures are warmer than normal in May and June, that
is "really going to tell the tale for their fire season," Ochoa said.

Five of the seven worst fire seasons in the past half-century have been
since 2000. Last year's damage was the worst: 9.9 million acres burned.


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