Irrelevant
Well-known member
I brought this up in another thread, but I think it warrants its own thread.
Here in Eastern WA we're seeing increased regulations restricting public use and recreation on public lands due to the wildfire risk. While I think everyone is in agreement that wildfire suck and that we shouldn't go out of our way to start them. The "safety third" in me, gets more and more irritated at this concept that we need to do everything possible to get a zero result (that's my perception of where we're going). When you combine those heavy-handed front-end restrictions with the fact that the FS almost categorically refuses to "put out" fires, you end up with drastically less "access" than we think we have to our public lands.
Example: The Pomas Fire in the Glacier Peak Wilderness area (Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest), it started on June 13, they closed down 100+ sq miles, and are already stating publicly that it'll "burn" until Oct. It's only grown to 1,700 acres in over two weeks, even though it's been 100+ degs the last two days. The nearest MODIS detection is 15 miles from the edge of the area closure. Just a few years ago, a fire like this would have caused some trail closures over maybe a 10-20 sq miles area all in the wilderness. Now it's just ridiculous.
Here in Eastern WA we're seeing increased regulations restricting public use and recreation on public lands due to the wildfire risk. While I think everyone is in agreement that wildfire suck and that we shouldn't go out of our way to start them. The "safety third" in me, gets more and more irritated at this concept that we need to do everything possible to get a zero result (that's my perception of where we're going). When you combine those heavy-handed front-end restrictions with the fact that the FS almost categorically refuses to "put out" fires, you end up with drastically less "access" than we think we have to our public lands.
Example: The Pomas Fire in the Glacier Peak Wilderness area (Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest), it started on June 13, they closed down 100+ sq miles, and are already stating publicly that it'll "burn" until Oct. It's only grown to 1,700 acres in over two weeks, even though it's been 100+ degs the last two days. The nearest MODIS detection is 15 miles from the edge of the area closure. Just a few years ago, a fire like this would have caused some trail closures over maybe a 10-20 sq miles area all in the wilderness. Now it's just ridiculous.

