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Forest officials: Containment of some fires expected in fall PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Thursday, 03 July 2008
MENDOCINO NATIONAL FOREST – While fires on the Mendocino National Forest's Upper Lake Ranger District moved toward containment, a complex of fires in another part of the forest continued to grow, with containment not expected until this fall.


In all, more than 10,000 acres of Mendocino National Forest lands have burned due to lightning strikes that took place on June 21. Those strikes sparked at least 50 fires across all of the forest's three ranger districts.


The four-fire Soda Complex, which has burned 5,100 acres across Lake and Mendocino counties, is 72-percent contained, according to a Wednesday report from forest officials.


Progress is being made on the complex, officials reported, with 406 personnel continuing the firefighting effort in remote areas to the north and northwest of Lake Pillsbury.


A backfire was used on Wednesday on the eastern side of one of the fires, the Mill, and a dozer line was being built to stop its spread south, officials reported.


Meanwhile, the Yolla Bolly Complexmade up of 23 active lightning fires in Mendocino, Trinity and Tehama counties overtook the Soda Complex in size on Wednesday, having burned a total of 5,387 acres.


There are 96 personnel assigned to the Yolla Bolly Complex, which forest officials said is located 60 miles northwest of Willows.


The complex is 5-percent contained, with officials closing down the Yolla Bolly-Middle Eel Wilderness because of concerns for public safety.


Smokejumpers were dropped into the complex's Yellow and Jacket fires Wednesday to begin suppression efforts, officials reported. A helitack crew was working to build a line to confine the fires' east side.


Forest officials said the Yolla Bolly Complex isn't expected to be contained until Oct. 30.


For more information about the fires, visit www.fs.fed.us/r5/mendocino/currentconditions/.


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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The Bush firefighting plan -
written by Donna Christopher, July 03, 2008
let it burn itself out. Making us a 'federal emergency' instead of a 'federal disaster' means less resources to our state to help in this mess. Heckuva Job Dubya! Only six more months of this happy horses*#@ :evil: Wait till the Santa Anna's kick up in a couple of month - we're literally toast.
Santa Ana\'s???? Here??
written by helenemw, July 03, 2008
Sorry, I think those are reserved for So Cal.... I do see our summer 'season' here going to H in a handbasket, along with the rest of the country... And I'm not sarahejones
...
written by Magnum, July 03, 2008
Donna, that is how the feds always fight fires in the forests. That is what happens when you let enviromentalists run the show.
So Magnum your telling me
written by Donna Christopher, July 03, 2008
W & FEMA are environmentalists??? Man, they can't get anything right. And Helen I know the Santa Ana's hit SoCal but last I looked NorCal and SoCal operated under the same state budget with the same state firefighters and national guard. Aren't we in this together? And if were not, can we keep our water from up here up here?
Fires
written by Toad, July 04, 2008
First off, this is California not New Orleans, we will not blame the federal government for disasters!! We are as prepared as possible for the fires but there are situations that get the upper hand, Miss Christopher, please do some research, Santa Anas are a southern Ca event, however in northern ca we have the north winds basically the same situation. Hot dry winds that tend to accelerate fires. Addittionally northern and southern ca do operate from the same state budget but the fires in the national forests are managed by the us government not the state. No state money is spent on forest service fires, any help rendered by CDF or local government resources is paid for by the feds.

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