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Firefighters, bulldozers slow Walker Fire's growth PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Thursday, 26 June 2008
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Anthony Wanzer of Lakeport was among several private bulldozer operators working to cut fire lines on Wednesday, June 25, 2008. Photo by John Jensen.

 



WALKER RIDGE – Walker Ridge Road winds through thousands of acres of remote land, the trees and vegetation – once green with vegetation – now smoking, black and skeletal. {sidebar id=87}


Here and there, however, there are islands of still-green bushes and plants, and the occasional undamaged pine tree, usually surrounded by a newly cut bulldozer line.


There are also signs of life – a bird flying overhead, looking for a place to land amidst the charred landscape; quail running alongside of the road. There's even a rattlesnake lying on the gravel, washboarded road. He decides it's time to leave and eases over the edge of the road as he becomes the subject of a photo.


This charred landscape is what's left behind after the Walker Fire – burning since Sunday, about 14 miles east of Clearlake Oaks – has passed through.


Dan Sendek, a Cal Fire division chief for safety and training, said that the fire was making constant runs along Walker Ridge Wednesday afternoon, but by evening there was no active fire to be seen for miles.


It was a day of significant gains for firefighters, who kept the fire from gaining much ground.


The night before, dozer crews cut 20 miles of line in an effort to keep the fire from spreading, said Cal Fire Firefighter Talon Sutherland.


By day's end Wednesday the fire had reached 14,500 acres, with 10-percent containment, said Sutherland. There were 592 firefighting personnel in the county to work on the fire.


Sutherland said the fire was moving south southeast toward Highway 20; however, the highway remained open Wednesday night.


During the afternoon, Sendek said that more aerial water drops on the fire had taken place.

 

 

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A rattler makes his exit from the gravel roadway. The snake was one of a few signs of wildlife still present in the area on Wednesday, June 25, 2008. Photo by John Jensen.

 

 


He also reported that the cause of the fire was not lightning-related, although the official cause wasn't yet determined.


On Wednesday evening, most of the fire crews had been pulled out of the Walker Ridge area and sent to base camp at Konocti Conservation Camp, located along Highway 29 between Kelseyville and Lower Lake.


Keeping a watch at Walker Ridge


Staying on scene at Walker Ridge for the night were strike teams from Monterey and Placer counties, keeping an eye out to make sure there were no flareups.

 

 

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Robert Foxworthy is a member of a Monterey County strike team staying on scene on Walker Ridge on Wednesday, June 25, 2008. The team was scheduled to stay overnight to watch for flareups. Photo by John Jensen.
 

 


Farther down along the road, at about 7 p.m., was a crew of bulldozer operators who had previously been at the Wild Fire, which burned more than 4,000 acres in Solano and Napa counties.


The men are private contractors hired by Cal Fire to come in and put their bulldozing skills to work building containment lines.


The lines also will clear up the area so hand crews can come in and do the intensive work of cleaning up flareups, said Anthony Wanzer of Lakeport, who owns A/T Wanzer Grading and Excavating.


Wanzer and other members of the team – Adam Peters of RB Peters in Lakeport, Gary Calvi who owns his own Sebastopol-based construction company, and Jerry Shuck, also of Sebastopol – arrived at the fire about midday Wednesday “and went right to work,” said Wanzer.


The men said they've been receiving other calls from all over to come to work on other fires – including those in the Mendocino National Forest.

 

 

 

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The scorched landscape left behind by the Walker Fire stretches for miles along Walker Ridge Road. Photographed Wednesday, June 25, 2008. Photo by Elizabeth Larson.
 

 

 


They also agreed than they've had more calls for fire work this week that in the past five years.


Wanzer pointed across a draw to a nearby hill, where a path of white ash led up one side. He explained that the ash indicated an area where the fire had burned very hot.


The men were tired but seemed in good spirits Wednesday evening, despite the fact that they missed out on a steak dinner back at the base camp.


Calvi said they would remain there overnight. They've been sleeping in their trucks for days.


Local firefighters get a rest


Wednesday was a day of rest for members of the Lake County strike team, said Lakeport Fire Chief Ken Wells.


The firefighters – coming from all county fire protection districts – were the first responders over the weekend. The first day and a half on the Walker Fire, they didn't get much rest, said Wells.

 

 

 

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The smoky air turned the sunlight bright orange. Photographed Wednesday, June 25, 2008, along Walker Ridge Road. Photo by Elizabeth Larson.
 

 

 


Now, they're on a cycle of 24 hours on duty, 24 hours off, he said.


Wells said the local teams are supposed to be back on duty at 7 a.m. Thursday.


Elsewhere around the county, it's been fairly quiet, said Wells. Mostly his department is receiving a lot of calls about the smoke, and fielding questions from area residents concerned about how the air could possibly affect their health.


Area residents seem more vigilant and aware of fire concerns right now, he said.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 

 

 

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In the distance, a water tender and, beyond that, equipment on a far rise along Walker Ridge Road on Wednesday, June 25, 2008. Photo by John Jensen.
 

 


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Comments (4)Add Comment
Thanks for the update
written by Donna Christopher, June 26, 2008
on this fire and BIG Thanks to all who are fighting it. Great pics John & Elizabeth of an awfully sad sight. Poor WhoopDeDoo Ridge. smilies/sad.gif
A word Of Thanks
written by purplegirl, June 26, 2008
I just want to say a public "thank you" to all the firefighters and others who have put their lives at risk to deal with these fires. Also, I want to say that I appreciate the map on the homepage and all the stories to keep us updated on the subject. When you can barely get anything about it on television (as they are more concerned with Bay Area news) it is times like these when a community based news source like this is extremely invaluable and it is deeply appreciated.
Very welcome
written by lcnewsadmin, June 26, 2008
Thank you for the heartfelt sentiment purplegirl!

I'd just like to suggest that community based news is extremely important regardless of the event du jour but that that is when people truly realize it's importance.

Short story, a small town in the northern US had a major train wreck a few(?) years ago and since all the area radio stations were corporate and operated from outside the town, nobody could get any up to date info, resulting in panic, fear and anger.

Local news is critical in times of emergency and just as critical to Democracy. It's a fact.
Thanks for reading! smilies/cheesy.gif
Here\'s the story
written by taxismom, June 26, 2008
On Minot, N.D., Radio, A Single Corporate Voice

Across the sparsely populated prairie, radio signals connect people in far-flung communities to one another and the world outside. They carry valuable updates on weather, commodity prices and tornados as well as recipes and birth announcements. And for those who spend a lot of time outdoors doing things with their hands, radio is a medium that is taken very seriously.

Even as the radio industry has consolidated, station owners say that it remains one of the least concentrated media sectors. The nationwide leader, Clear Channel Communications, owns about 1,200 of the 11,000 radio stations in the country.

But here in North Dakota, where there are about 80 commercial stations, Clear Channel owns 23 of them. And through a quirk in the rules governing radio concentration, it owns all six commercial stations in Minot, the state's fourth-largest city, with a population nearing 37,000. (There is a public radio station, and a Christian station in the city as well.)

As the Federal Communications Commissions reconsiders media ownership rules for television and newspapers, many are examining the effects of the radio industry's consolidation, speeded by the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Opponents may try to drive the debate over media consolidation to the edges. Minot is one of those edges.

Clear Channel's stronghold in Minot has become a political lightning rod. In January 2002, a train derailment at 1 a.m. spilled a vast white cloud of suffocating anhydrous ammonia fertilizer over Minot. One person died.

The police were unable to reach anyone by phone at the local radio station, KCJB, that is the designated emergency broadcaster. Station employees had to be roused from their homes, causing a big delay.

The police said that because Clear Channel was piping in a satellite feed from elsewhere, human presence at the station was dispensable -- an assertion that Senator Byron L. Dorgan, a North Dakota Democrat, repeated in hearings on media consolidation. Clear Channel said that someone was always on duty during the night, but busy phone lines and technological misunderstandings resulted in the emergency failure.

Local officials now acknowledge that may have been true, but the event seems to have crystalized a sense of anxiety here and elsewhere over Clear Channel's grip on Minot and many other small cities and towns around the country, where the effects of consolidation can be disproportionately felt.

''Over time, concentration of markets means less competition and we know that less competition is always bad for consumers,'' Senator Dorgan said. ''The question is, Where does this stop?''

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C05EED61539F932A05750C0A9659C8B63&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Subjects/A/Antitrust%20Actions%20and%20Laws

It is critical that we support our local radio station and our local news sources..our lives may depend on it.

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