owlmoose: A photo of a Highway 1 roadsign, with the California Coast in the background (california - sign)
KJ ([personal profile] owlmoose) wrote2018-11-09 10:17 pm
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World on Fire -- Literally

Another fall, another series of devastating wildfires.

They're not quite as close to home as last year's North Bay fires, literally or figuratively, but it all feels very familiar, from the stories of destruction -- one fire, the Camp fire about 150 miles north, has burned down an entire town -- to the smoke filling our air. Even though the fire is notably further away, I feel like the air quality is notably worse this time, and it's supposed to stay bad at least through the weekend.

Fire has always a natural part of life in California, to the point that August through October is known as "fire season", but the years of drought interspersed with occasional very wet winters has not only made the fires burn hotter, they've started happening year round. And the more the climate changes, the worse it's going to get.

I try not to be defeatist about these things -- although it's probably too late to turn around global warming entirely, it's not too late to mitigate the worst of the damage -- but sometimes it's really hard to feel otherwise.
vicki_rae: (Default)

[personal profile] vicki_rae 2018-11-10 09:02 am (UTC)(link)
Same. Smoke forecast for tomorrow is horrible all over the bay area. The fires are heartbreaking and fire season keeps expanding every year. Sometimes I think it's too late to do more than minimize the coming climate disaster. We had to evacuate last year but our area was very fortunate and only a handful of homes burned.


nanslice: (Default)

[personal profile] nanslice 2018-11-10 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm so sorry. I'm watching all this from the east coast and even over here we're like "it gets worse each year!" I hope that things aren't too late but I agree, it seems like we're reaching a point of no return. It's so sad and scary.