Tuolumne County, CA -- (AP) As crews made significant progress
building containment lines around a giant wildfire, officials said they
would maintain use of a National Guard Predator drone to give them early
views of any new flare-ups across in the remote and rugged landscape.
The Rim Fire expanded to 301 square miles, but crews had a productive
day Wednesday and containment increased to 30 percent. Cooler
temperatures and lighter winds aided the firefighters.
Increasingly
confident fire officials said they expect to fully surround the blaze in
three weeks, although it will burn for much longer than that.
"We continue to get line around this fire," California fire spokesman
Daniel Berlant said. "It's not nearly as active as it was last week."
The MQ-1 unmanned aircraft deployed Wednesday was being remotely
piloted hundreds of miles away, allowing ground commanders to keep an
eye out for new fires they otherwise wouldn't have immediately seen.
"The drone is providing data directly back to the incident commander,
allowing him to make quick decisions about which resources to deploy
and where," Berlant said.
Previously, officials relied on helicopters that needed to refuel every two hours.
While unmanned aircraft have mapped past fires, use of the Predator
will be the longest sustained mission by a drone in California to
broadcast information to firefighters in real time.
The plane, the size of a small Cessna, will remain over the burn zone
for up to 22 hours at a time, allowing fire commanders to monitor fire
activity, determine the fire's direction of movement, the extent of
containment and confirm new fires ignited by lightning or flying embers.
The drone is being flown by the 163rd Wing of the California National
Guard at March Air Reserve Base in Riverside and is operating from
Victorville Airport, both in Southern California. It generally flew over
unpopulated areas on its 300-mile flight to the Rim Fire. Outside the
fire area, it will be escorted by a manned aircraft.
Officials were careful to point out the images are being used only to aid in the effort to contain the fire.
In 2009 a NASA Predator equipped with an infrared imaging sensor
helped the U.S. Forest Service assess damage from a fire in Angeles
National Forest. In 2008, a drone capable of detecting hot spots helped
firefighters assess movement of a series of wildfires stretching from
Southern California's Lake Arrowhead to San Diego.
The Rim Fire started Aug. 17 and quickly exploded in size, becoming
one of the 10 largest California wildfires on record. Its progression
slowed earlier this week when it moved from parts of the forest with
thick underbrush that had not burned in nearly a century to areas that
had seen fire in the past two decades.
But it will burn for months, possibly until California's dry season ends this fall. "My prediction is it will burn until we see rain," said Hugh Safford, a regional ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service.
That means the smoke could continue to foul air north of Yosemite in
the Lake Tahoe basin and neighboring Nevada, although residents received
something of a reprieve Wednesday when for the first time in three days
blue sky was sometimes visible through the haze.
The air quality index in the Reno area still had improved only to the
"unhealthy" level, and in Douglas County, Nev., school children were
kept indoors again when the index registered in the "hazardous"
category.
The air was clear, however, in the tourist mecca of Yosemite Valley,
home to the towering Half Dome and El Capitan rock formations and the
2,425-foot plunge of Yosemite Falls.
The Rim Fire has destroyed 111 structures, including 11 homes, and posed a threat to ancient giant sequoias.
The fire also has threatened San Francisco's water supply at the
Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, but Stratton said it was burning itself out as
it approached and that crews were lighting back burns to push it back
into the wilderness.
From Blythe: pretty darned accurate review from Associated Press (as opposed to other sources that I have totally disregarded) Be safe.


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