
Perimeter Map http://hikearizona.com/map.php?QX=773
Inciweb http://www.inciweb.org/incident/article/2225/11545/
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as the containment date since the fire started over a month ago. At one point, they had around 80% containment and wrote an update stating they felt certain that containment could be achieved by the expected date. I thought, "I hope so"! It would be pretty bad if you've got a 3 month containment horizon and it's already at 80%, but can't have it at 100% by the end of August. Besides, if left to burn for 3 months, everything out there would be treated.Wednesday August 31st, 2011 approx. 12:00 AM
Excellent map. Thanks, Joe!joe bartels wrote:http://hikearizona.com/t2011/06/09/O_23 ... 427-17.jpg
great pics... so sad! Thx for the link.sirena wrote:Pictures of the Barfoot Lookout going up in flames: http://narcamoorecraig.blogspot.com/201 ... e-two.html
No, it will be changed forever. An important key is how the mountain recovered from the previous burns. While some areas went through the expected cycle of ferns/grasses/aspens, as of last fall, many areas of the 1987 and 1994 burns were almost completely unchanged from the day they burned. It depends on many things such as how badly the soil was sterilized, what the exposure is, the moisture, surrounding areas, etc. Apparently, in comparison to most areas the Cave Creek area was hurt the least. There were some beneficial burns there and many areas were untouched. It is the high country that was ravaged.RedRoxx44 wrote:So sad to look at the fire map. A photo/video link I was sent showed some pretty hot ( ashy gray) look to some large areas. It looks as if the entire range is burned and while may be some islands it will never be the same in my lifetime. In a few years will be ferns and wildflowers if lucky but no more big pines and shade to escape the heat. Maybe the south fork survived in some form but when the rains come so will the silt down into the lower canyons.
Yes, as I mentioned above, the two main burns were 1994 (Rattlesnake Fire) and 1987 (near Centella). We thought that the 1987 fire was a tragedy because it ate up some of the most beautiful thick stands of trees on the plateau area between Fly Peak and Centella. Then the Rattlesnake fire came. We then had to get used to the changes after that fire burned tremendous areas all over the high country. We all used to think that the Rattlesnake Fire would be the biggest fire the mountains would ever endure.sbkelley wrote:From what I read on Inciweb, it looks like most of the burn in the Monument itself was of the low-level brush-clearing variety: http://www.inciweb.org/incident/2225/. If that's true, great for the long run.
So sad to think of the Rustler Park-Chiricahua Crest area being ravaged though, we went up there a few times in the late summer/early fall when the raspberries came out. At the same time, weren't these raspberry thickets post-fire growth themselves? It looked like there had been some significant burns along some of the Crest Trail in the past.