“A call went out, and I could see the fire outside. In the back of my head, I was like ‘Hey, this is just another fire — the fire department’s going to stop it and save my house. I’m going to come back with a good story to tell.’ That wasn’t the case.” I’m speaking to Jim Dowling, a survivor of the Carr Fire which burned for over a month in 2018, consuming much of California’s Shasta and Trinity counties, before it was contained. “The fire moved very, very quickly. And it didn’t seem all that windy. When we evacuated, it was three miles away. Our house went up in the next 24 hours.”
Such harrowing accounts are all too common in the vast wilds of Northern California, uniting residents urban and rural, rich and poor, Right and Left. Lands that were filled with fire-tolerant glades of oak under Native American stewardship are now dense pine forests brimming with flammable biomass. Everyone here has a story about forest fires. Locals’ accounts are served with strong opinions on the political failings of both the Californian Democrats under Gavin Newsom and the Trump-led national GOP. Over the last decade, the West Coast has given us a glimpse into the future of ecological calamity. Now, as the islands of Greece crackle and fume, and as California’s latest wildfire sweeps into Nevada, we can already intimate how these infernal events can reshape a community, igniting all of its underlying social ills.
Judging by California’s experience, one’s chances of recovering from a forest fire diverge greatly along class and geographic lines. Despite some palliative measures, the California and Federal government, ostensibly committed to the victims of climate change, is visibly asleep at the wheel. Sacramento is leaving its urban and rural peripheries, poverty-stricken inner-city sectors and remote townships to suffer the brunt of escalating fire destruction. The Carr Fire was succeeded by the even greater August Complex Fire in 2020 (which engulfed 379,613 hectares to become the largest fire in Californian history). But August’s damage is dwarfed by the relatively small Camp Fire in 2018. The Camp Fire became the state’s deadliest, killing 85 people and bulldozing the town of Paradise. Many of the smaller settlements I drove through still seem like ghost towns: depleted of life not only by fire but reactively high rents and rocketing insurance premiums.
At the site of the Carr Fire, victims talk of a “fire tornado” ripping through their homes. Its path took it through the small Gold Rush settlements of Whiskeytown, Old Shasta, and French Gulch, and towards the heart of Redding. The Carr formed part of a new wave of fires produced by a combination of climate change, human population, dodgy infrastructure, and the hot Diablo Winds that blow in from the eastern mountains and deserts. California has, always, faced forest fires — but these are new beasts. Together, environmental and human forces have transformed wildfires from manageable occurrences into cataclysmic disasters, rampaging through the dense biomass of pine forests and chaparral shrubs that overgrow without controlled burn operations.
There, I meet Jennifer Gibson, the post-wildfire coordination ecologist for the National Parks Service who lost her own home to Carr. Starting in the centre of Redding, we drive out to Whiskeytown Lake. Vast clusters of blackened pines jut up along mountain lines in what used to be dense forests; what once resembled an alpine vista now appears as a scene from Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. And the people here have a dystopian choice to make. Some choose to stay, embracing the pioneer spirit, rebuilding their houses in less-flammable material. Others believe that much of California will one day be uninhabitable and leave, seeking more northerly and temperate lands to settle. “You could hear the propane tanks going off, the sky was red, ashes were raining down. I wake up, and it looks like a war scene,” Gibson says. “After the Carr Fire, I don’t know where to live in California that would feel safe.” But Gibson’s experience is an economic issue too: the combination of the Carr and Camp fires has pushed up construction contractor prices and rents, forcing many to move inland to Idaho and Montana, where costs are lower.
We walk up to Gibson’s house — a burnt-down log cabin, with only the stone foundations remaining. “The wind up here was like giant bellows, feeding the fire into a frenzy. All the houses around here were burnt down,” she says. “It hurts coming back, I’m thinking about selling the land.” Dowling tells me that poor government and insurance company responses have led to general resentment, and even conspiracy, against the state and large corporations. “Distressed people have suspicions… a lot of people would substitute the term ‘insurance company’ for ‘the government’… they blame the system.”
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SubscribeThe “national Trump-led GOP” had f*ck all to do with California’s completely mismanaged forests and the fires that result. In fact, the entire state is run by a combination of the ignorant, the incompetent, and the malevolent – which fully describes the Democrats, led by the repugnant Gavin Newsom. California’s problems start and end with California.
The “national Trump-led GOP” had f*ck all to do with California’s completely mismanaged forests and the fires that result. In fact, the entire state is run by a combination of the ignorant, the incompetent, and the malevolent – which fully describes the Democrats, led by the repugnant Gavin Newsom. California’s problems start and end with California.
California can’t seem to do ANYTHING right!
California can’t seem to do ANYTHING right!
2022 featured the lowest level of worldwide burning ever. It has been trending down from 3% of world land area in the early 2000’s to 2.2% last year. 2023 is looking better yet.
California’s fire problems, like many of its others, are self-inflicted. It really would be better if things went back to the way they were.
Forest fires aren’t increasing across the globe, but there are some pockets where fires have been increasing. California is one of them. If pressed, I can dig around and find some NASA stats to confirm this.
Forest fires aren’t increasing across the globe, but there are some pockets where fires have been increasing. California is one of them. If pressed, I can dig around and find some NASA stats to confirm this.
2022 featured the lowest level of worldwide burning ever. It has been trending down from 3% of world land area in the early 2000’s to 2.2% last year. 2023 is looking better yet.
California’s fire problems, like many of its others, are self-inflicted. It really would be better if things went back to the way they were.
I’m drawn to paragraph 2, ‘under native American stewardship…’ Highlights to me the real reason is the beastly colonials, they’re the problem!
Seriously though, every time I read an article about California I’m stunned by the staggering inequality and obviously gross hypocrisy of the place. When I talk to successful people who spend time in California I’m even more stunned that they never see it, or acknowledge it.
It reminds me of the arguments held between those of faith and atheists, the starting assumptions and beliefs are so opposed that no conclusions could ever be reached. I suspect I’ll be reading articles of all that is wrong with California for a very long time yet.
Or at least until the money leaves, which seems very unlikely – to be wealthy in California might just be one of the highest standards of living on earth. Leaves me scratching my head!
I’m drawn to paragraph 2, ‘under native American stewardship…’ Highlights to me the real reason is the beastly colonials, they’re the problem!
Seriously though, every time I read an article about California I’m stunned by the staggering inequality and obviously gross hypocrisy of the place. When I talk to successful people who spend time in California I’m even more stunned that they never see it, or acknowledge it.
It reminds me of the arguments held between those of faith and atheists, the starting assumptions and beliefs are so opposed that no conclusions could ever be reached. I suspect I’ll be reading articles of all that is wrong with California for a very long time yet.
Or at least until the money leaves, which seems very unlikely – to be wealthy in California might just be one of the highest standards of living on earth. Leaves me scratching my head!
“The Camp Fire became the state’s deadliest, killing 85 people and bulldozing the town of Paradise.”
At the risk of sounding flippant about a situation that is obviously very serious, I couldn’t help but be reminded of the Eagles lyric from the song The Last Resort –
They call it paradise
I don’t know why
You call someplace paradise
Kiss it goodbye
“They paved paradise and put up a parking lot”. Canada’s Joni Mitchell may have had California (or New York) on the brain when she wrote that.
“They paved paradise and put up a parking lot”. Canada’s Joni Mitchell may have had California (or New York) on the brain when she wrote that.
“The Camp Fire became the state’s deadliest, killing 85 people and bulldozing the town of Paradise.”
At the risk of sounding flippant about a situation that is obviously very serious, I couldn’t help but be reminded of the Eagles lyric from the song The Last Resort –
They call it paradise
I don’t know why
You call someplace paradise
Kiss it goodbye
“Some note that as forest fire frequency declines, acreage, time scales and destruction rates skyrocket…”
“.. Tarne focuses on the need for auxiliary aid, mental-health services, and community support, as fires become more frequent and deadly every year.”
I’m not being ornery, but seems to me that fires can’t both decline in frequency and simultaneously become more frequent?
“Forest fires” and “fires” are not interchangeable.
> “Jaime Tarne, who has been involved with wildland firefighting and the science behind fire management since her first season in 1975 with the Forest Service.” (Just before Dumetrius’ second quote).
I don’t think Tarne was talking about urban fires becoming more frequent and dealy every year. I think Dumetrius has a point.
> “Jaime Tarne, who has been involved with wildland firefighting and the science behind fire management since her first season in 1975 with the Forest Service.” (Just before Dumetrius’ second quote).
I don’t think Tarne was talking about urban fires becoming more frequent and dealy every year. I think Dumetrius has a point.
“Forest fires” and “fires” are not interchangeable.
“Some note that as forest fire frequency declines, acreage, time scales and destruction rates skyrocket…”
“.. Tarne focuses on the need for auxiliary aid, mental-health services, and community support, as fires become more frequent and deadly every year.”
I’m not being ornery, but seems to me that fires can’t both decline in frequency and simultaneously become more frequent?
As a California resident who, along with others, criticized McIlhagga’s previous article about libertarian separatists and “preppers” in Shasta County for factual slips and what seemed like a breezy outsider’s approach:
I want to commend Mr. McIlhagga for an in-depth, well-researched article. I didn’t think his previous effort was terrible or without interest and importance, but this one was very thoughtful and taught me much I didn’t know. Despite the starkness of the topic, I offer my genuine appreciation. [end: AJ’s Uncomissioned Reviews, no. 117]
As a California resident who, along with others, criticized McIlhagga’s previous article about libertarian separatists and “preppers” in Shasta County for factual slips and what seemed like a breezy outsider’s approach:
I want to commend Mr. McIlhagga for an in-depth, well-researched article. I didn’t think his previous effort was terrible or without interest and importance, but this one was very thoughtful and taught me much I didn’t know. Despite the starkness of the topic, I offer my genuine appreciation. [end: AJ’s Uncomissioned Reviews, no. 117]
As another noted, things being better under Native American stewardship is a strange claim, unless physical presence in small numbers is stewardship. Suggesting that lack of regulation is a cause, rather than environmental groups with great political leverage blocking sane, science based management, is mentioned but not cited as primary. Also, there is no lack of regulation of the power company which operates under heavy mandates to purchase over priced home generated power from those wealthy enough to roof with solar cells, as well as other asset sucking mandates. . And lastly, what is evil about a corporation wishing to sell its products? Given the author’s summary of the politics, technological means may be the only bridge available until sanity (?) stumbles into California.
Native Americans used to conduct controlled burns of the forests periodically, an inexact “science” that has been shown to stave off most of the worst, sudden devastation that comes from the “White Man’s” usual, doomed, stop-it-from-burning at-all-costs approach. A deliberate, controlled fire every 50 years is less dangerous and devastating than a sudden conflagration every 200.
But when you “must” develop, occupy, and exploit the landscape to the extent it can well withstand and beyond, you are not thinking about sustainability, or what used to be called Posterity. Without returning to Neolithic ways or population density, we could stand to admit that the planetary stewardship or “land management” of pre-contact Native Americans–and, for those of us who are white, our prehistoric European ancestors–was in many ways superior to what we are doing today.
Yup. Whitey wanted to maximize timber production. Indians wanted open grazing land for the deer they hunted. They seem to have been quite skilled at controlled burning.
We can agree there.
We can agree there.
Yes, the previous occupants had hundreds to thousands of years to optimize their fire practices for their lifestyles. They were much better at sustainability, than the Europeans who had hitched their wagon to exponential growth and ever increasing technology.
It’s going to be hard to adapt many of those practices when the countryside is full of occupied houses, tho.
Yup. Whitey wanted to maximize timber production. Indians wanted open grazing land for the deer they hunted. They seem to have been quite skilled at controlled burning.
Yes, the previous occupants had hundreds to thousands of years to optimize their fire practices for their lifestyles. They were much better at sustainability, than the Europeans who had hitched their wagon to exponential growth and ever increasing technology.
It’s going to be hard to adapt many of those practices when the countryside is full of occupied houses, tho.
Native Americans used to conduct controlled burns of the forests periodically, an inexact “science” that has been shown to stave off most of the worst, sudden devastation that comes from the “White Man’s” usual, doomed, stop-it-from-burning at-all-costs approach. A deliberate, controlled fire every 50 years is less dangerous and devastating than a sudden conflagration every 200.
But when you “must” develop, occupy, and exploit the landscape to the extent it can well withstand and beyond, you are not thinking about sustainability, or what used to be called Posterity. Without returning to Neolithic ways or population density, we could stand to admit that the planetary stewardship or “land management” of pre-contact Native Americans–and, for those of us who are white, our prehistoric European ancestors–was in many ways superior to what we are doing today.
As another noted, things being better under Native American stewardship is a strange claim, unless physical presence in small numbers is stewardship. Suggesting that lack of regulation is a cause, rather than environmental groups with great political leverage blocking sane, science based management, is mentioned but not cited as primary. Also, there is no lack of regulation of the power company which operates under heavy mandates to purchase over priced home generated power from those wealthy enough to roof with solar cells, as well as other asset sucking mandates. . And lastly, what is evil about a corporation wishing to sell its products? Given the author’s summary of the politics, technological means may be the only bridge available until sanity (?) stumbles into California.
“a new wave of fires produced by a combination of climate change”
Not reading any further. Climate change is a hoax for stupid people of all levels of education, and it is being turned into a universal scapegoat.
The Freakifornians are utterly incompetent. Everything they touch they f**k up. Then they loose the scapegoats. This is entirely on the heads of the earth worshippers who stymied land managemant. I think they need to be grabbed when the next big fire starts and thrown into it. Send them to hell with a preview.
“a new wave of fires produced by a combination of climate change”
Not reading any further. Climate change is a hoax for stupid people of all levels of education, and it is being turned into a universal scapegoat.
The Freakifornians are utterly incompetent. Everything they touch they f**k up. Then they loose the scapegoats. This is entirely on the heads of the earth worshippers who stymied land managemant. I think they need to be grabbed when the next big fire starts and thrown into it. Send them to hell with a preview.