Looks like wind also out of SSE so blowing fire back onto itself, and not blowing a gale. They may get a handle on this today.
Update from the burning Texas panhandle. This all happened within the last half hour. Thank you, God. pic.twitter.com/n9IsuQFIcU
— Jimmy G (@jimmygards) February 29, 2024
That's awesome. And it seems so contradictory that this fire is raging in cold weather. My mind just associates fire with heat and dry, but I guess ambient temp is largely irrelevant. I'm sure the firefighters appreciate it, though.BenTheGoodAg said:
It is snowing pretty good on my drive to work this morning. Praise God.
MyNameIsJeff said:That's awesome. And it seems so contradictory that this fire is raging in cold weather. My mind just associates fire with heat and dry, but I guess ambient temp is largely irrelevant. I'm sure the firefighters appreciate it, though.BenTheGoodAg said:
It is snowing pretty good on my drive to work this morning. Praise God.
UninformedInternetBlogger said:Update from the burning Texas panhandle. This all happened within the last half hour. Thank you, God. pic.twitter.com/n9IsuQFIcU
— Jimmy G (@jimmygards) February 29, 2024
cupofjoe04 said:
I agree with CanyonAg,
At this point I wouldn't deviate from the major artery- stick with 287 and Amarillo.
thank you. yes, when I was looking the other day I saw Magenta fire near the Boys Ranch right on 385.CanyonAg77 said:
Understandable worry. It is not inappropriate, as I suspect lots of TexAgs folks are headed to Colorado for Spring Break.
At present the major wild fires are 50+ miles north of your normal route.
Your planned alternate is worse, it puts you going by the Magenta fire, which as of last night was 2500 acres, 65% contained, and is next to highway 385 south of Channing.
The best thing to do is check wild fire maps and traffic condition maps closer to the trip.
Average Joe said:
In case any of you were questioning how great our school is, just passed 8ish trucks and trailers all tagged with "Texas A&M veterinarian emergency team" headed up HWY 6.
Destined for slaughter more than likely.TH36 said:
So when a cow's udder is like that, is there any saving them or are they toast from future infection?
Independence H-D said:Average Joe said:
In case any of you were questioning how great our school is, just passed 8ish trucks and trailers all tagged with "Texas A&M veterinarian emergency team" headed up HWY 6.
The VET team is deployed as well as Texas A&M task Force One. The vet team will help take care of the search and rescue canines as well as livestock and domestic animals affected by the fires. They train with Texas A&M task Force One and in fact just did an operational readiness exercise this past weekend with task force
We had some smoke yesterday when the wind was from the south.CanyonAg77 said:
We only had one day of smoke, that was when the cold front blew in from the north. Has been clear since
Courson?eric76 said:We had some smoke yesterday when the wind was from the south.CanyonAg77 said:
We only had one day of smoke, that was when the cold front blew in from the north. Has been clear since
By the way, one of the firefighters came by the office about 6 am this morning to drink coffee before heading out. He said that he doesn't know if the fire got the Mesa Vista Ranch (was T Boone Pickens) main house down there, but that it did heavily damage some of the out buildings. I wonder who owns that now.
I also saw that about 80% the Turkey Track Ranch's 80,000 acres were burned. That's 100 sections.