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Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Wed Nov 02, 2011 12:16 am
by Bubba Suess
I loved the Jemez. I have a lot of great memories there:

http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/ ... php#page-2

Does anyone know exactly how burned the Jemez is? What is Bandalier like? Valles Caldera? What is the San Diego River like? The north side, around Cerro Pedernal? I have not been able to find much on this.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sat Nov 05, 2011 5:39 am
by benwood
i agree. I am in Missouri now, but as a New Mexico native, THIS SUCKS! I took my first camping trip with my wife in the jemez. any how I was there this summer during the fires and "holy shit" it was a rampage. big fat bummer man.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Thu Nov 10, 2011 10:33 pm
by MoapaPk
About 150 square miles have been taken by fire. That's bad, but remember the Jemez area is huge. I'd look at poor forest management and invasive plants (like cheatgrass) before "climate change."

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Thu Nov 10, 2011 11:08 pm
by lcarreau
The "Wallow Fire" occurring earlier this year in the White Mountains of eastern Arizona - approximately 225 sq. miles BURNED.

Kinda makes you wonder about some of these forest managers - in the end, WHAT do they manage? Burned trees ???

:shock:

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Fri Nov 11, 2011 12:55 am
by MoapaPk
The Cerro Grande Fire in 2000, which burned about 75 square miles, was actually started by the Jemez USFS. It was meant to be a controlled burn, but the winds were high and it raged on, destroying about 400 homes. If I had a reputation for burning down my own forests, I might also blame climate change.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Fri Nov 11, 2011 3:00 am
by coldfoot
The Wallow Fire in the White Mountains was started by two idiots who were camping and didn't put out their fire.

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/08/24/20110824wallow-fire-cousins-charged.html

"They stated that they believed their campfire was out because David threw a candy wrapper in the fire just prior to their departure, and it did not melt," court documents said. But when they were returning to their campsite several hours later, the Malboeufs told investigators, they could smell and see smoke from the area. "They tried to return to camp to cut their dogs loose, which they had left tied up in camp, but could not get close because of the fire and smoke," the complaint stated.


I repeat, idiots. Can't blame this one on the Forest Disservice, or border crossers for that matter.

After decades of overly aggressive fire suppression policy, the Forest Service doesn't have a lot to work with. Even if they turn around and do controlled thinning and burns and never screw up, there will be large devastating wildfires. IMO the effect of climate change will be visible over long timespans (not one year to the next) as the vegetation that returns is not necessarily going to be the same as what was there before.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Fri Nov 11, 2011 5:31 am
by Baarb
Read this recently, thought it was quite interesting re. drought and water supply management http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... -fail.html. I spent some years living in NM and would guess that the trees largely rely on summer rain and moisture from the odd snow fall in winter. If there is a tendency for drying then as coldfoot says, what can survive will change.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Fri Nov 11, 2011 5:46 am
by Bubba Suess
MoapaPk wrote:The Cerro Grande Fire in 2000, which burned about 75 square miles, was actually started by the Jemez USFS. It was meant to be a controlled burn, but the winds were high and it raged on, destroying about 400 homes. If I had a reputation for burning down my own forests, I might also blame climate change.


The east side of the Jemez has been burned six or so times in recent memory. Bandelier in particular seems to have been having a rough go lately. Flooding has wiped out some of the prettier spots in the park. The Falls trail is one of my favorites in New Mexico. It saddens me deeply that it has been hammered like this.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Fri Nov 11, 2011 5:19 pm
by lcarreau
coldfoot wrote:The Wallow Fire in the White Mountains was started by two idiots who were camping and didn't put out their fire.

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/08/24/20110824wallow-fire-cousins-charged.html



And, as we read on in the article ..

"They tried to return to camp to cut their dogs loose, which they had left tied up in camp, but could not get close because of the fire and smoke," the complaint stated.

The cousins RAN from the area toward the Black River where they stayed overnight, according to court documents.


This makes NO sense to me. They SAW the fire and smoke, but chose to stay near the river. WHY didn't they alert the authorities SOONER?

Unhealthy forest + IDIOTS = A FIRE waiting to HAPPEN! ! Daaaa..

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sat Nov 12, 2011 3:17 am
by CSUMarmot
Think this is bad? Try 85% of Colorado in about 5 years. Firestorm waiting to happen.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sat Nov 12, 2011 3:18 am
by Baarb
Some stuff about predicting fire seasons in South America based on sea surface temperature patterns http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15691060 (I tend to avoid most of the forums so sorry if this has been discussed ad nauseum)

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sat Nov 12, 2011 6:00 am
by MoapaPk
We definitely have a link in southern NV. El Nino usually means a high cheat grass crop, which means fires.

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sun Nov 13, 2011 1:54 am
by strudolyubov
The eastern/southeastern parts of Jemez were burned pretty bad: East-Northeast parts of Valles Caldera are gone, Cochiti Mesa is gone, Bandelier Monument has literally no pine forest left. The East Fork Jemez River canyon is mostly intact, as well as everything to the west of Las Conchas (where NM-4 crosses East Fork Jemez River). They also managed to save most of Chicoma Mountain area and Pajarito Mountain Ski Area near Los Alamos.

Here is the link to the page showing the map of the burned area:

http://www.inciweb.org/incident/2385/

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sun Nov 13, 2011 2:17 am
by lcarreau
strudolyubov wrote: The East Fork Jemez River canyon is mostly intact, as well as everything to the west of Las Conchas (where NM-4 crosses East Fork Jemez River). They also managed to save most of Chicoma Mountain area and Pajarito Mountain Ski Area near Los Alamos.


NOT trying to make light of a serious subject, but (sometimes) it helps if you look at the glass as being HALF FULL ..

Image

Re: Tragedy for the New Mexico landscape

PostPosted: Sun Nov 13, 2011 3:34 am
by MoapaPk
strudolyubov wrote:The eastern/southeastern parts of Jemez were burned pretty bad: East-Northeast parts of Valles Caldera are gone, Cochiti Mesa is gone, Bandelier Monument has literally no pine forest left. The East Fork Jemez River canyon is mostly intact, as well as everything to the west of Las Conchas (where NM-4 crosses East Fork Jemez River). They also managed to save most of Chicoma Mountain area and Pajarito Mountain Ski Area near Los Alamos.

Here is the link to the page showing the map of the burned area:

http://www.inciweb.org/incident/2385/


Boy, that is pretty grim.