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Thursday, September 26, 2013

FIRE REPORT AND PLANE DESK ROUTING SEPTEMBER 26 2013

$=TAX FAA/DOD/FEMA DETAIL APPROPRIATION
KMOD 262253Z 32018G22KT 10SM CLR 24/01 A2985 RMK AO2 PK WND 30027/2211
SLP107 T02390006
KRDD 262253Z 03012G16KT 10SM CLR 23/M01 A2993 RMK AO2 SLP132 T02281011
KMOD 262253Z 32018G22KT 10SM CLR 24/01 A2985 RMK AO2 PK WND 30027/2211
SLP107 T02390006

National Interagency Coordination Center
Incident Management Situation Report
SOURCE; USFS; USFMSC; NOTAM
Thursday, September 26, 2013 – 0530 MT
National Preparedness Level 1
National Fire Activity
Initial attack activity: Light (29 new fires)
New large fires: 0 (*)
Large fires contained: 0
Uncontained large fires: ** 2
Area Command Teams committed: 0
NIMOs committed: 0
Type 1 IMTs committed: 0
Type 2 IMTs committed: 1
** Uncontained large fires include only fires being managed under a
full suppression strategy.
Link to Geographic Area daily reports.
Southern California Area (PL 2)
New fires: 11
New large fires: 0
Uncontained large fires: 1
Type 2 IMTs committed: 1
Rim, Stanislaus NF. IMT 2 (Cooper). Two miles northeast of Buck
Meadows, CA. Timber, brush and grass.
Creeping and smoldering. Structures threatened. Evacuations, road and
area closures in effect.
Incident Name St Unit Size
Size
Chge
24 Hrs
%
Ctn
Est
Ctn
Totl
Pers
Pers
Chge
24 Hrs
Crw Eng Heli Strc
Lost
$$
CTD
Origin
Own
Rim CA STF 257,134 0 84 10/1 733 -212 6 20 4 112 125.3M FS
Corral Complex, Six Rivers NF. Ten miles east of Hoopa, CA. Timber and
brush. Minimal fire behavior.
Incident Name St Unit Size
Size
Chge
24 Hrs
%
Ctn
Est
Ctn
Totl
Pers
Pers
Chge
24 Hrs
Crw Eng Heli Strc
Lost
$$
CTD
Origin
Own
Corral Complex CA SRF 12,503 0 95 10/2 115 -3 3 0 0 0 36.4M FS
Northern California Area (PL 1)
New fires: 4
New large fires: 0
Uncontained large fires: 1Larimer Flood 2013, Larimer County.
Personnel are assisting with flood recovery. Numerous residences
threatened. Last report unless significant activity occurs.
Incident Name St Unit Size
Size
Chge
24 Hrs
%
Ctn
Est
Ctn
Totl
Pers
Pers
Chge
24 Hrs
Crw Eng Heli Strc
Lost
$$
CTD
Origin
Own
Larimer Flood 2013 CO LRX --- --- --- UNK 132 -22 1 0 8 3,700 7.4M CNTY
Other Fires
(As of September 20)
GACC Fires Cumulative
Acres Crews Engines Helicopters Total
Personnel
AK 6 122,853 0 0 0 0
NW 14 69,507 5 14 3 443
NO 0 0 0 0 0 0
SO 0 0 0 0 0 0
NR 44 83,841 1 2 1 55
EB 15 61,772 1 2 0 26
WB 0 0 0 0 0 0
SW 0 0 0 0 0 0
RM 0 0 0 0 0 0
EA 0 0 0 0 0 0
SA 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 79 337,972 7 18 4 524
Predictive Services Discussion: Scattered rain and snow showers, with
a few thunderstorms, will move
through the northern and central Rockies and the Great Basin. Widely
scattered thunderstorms will move
across Florida. Most of the country will have cold to mild conditions
with warmer weather spreading across the
southern and central Plains and along the Gulf Coast region.
http://www.predictiveservices.nifc.gov/outlooks/outlooks.htm
Rocky Mountain Area (PL 1)
New fires: 3
New large fires: 0
Uncontained large fires: 0FREQUENT SPOT FIRES ACROSS THE LINE
Weather / Fire Behavior Category
There are few watchout situations that state more clearly how much
potential your fire has
for rapid, uncontrolled growth. Consider the following questions if
you are getting spot fires
across your line:
Can you handle increased spotting? List some ways you can keep ahead of spot
fires (gridding the green, lookouts, etc.)
What is your probability of ignition doing? Is it increasing or decreasing?
Do you have a plan for long-range spotting? In what fuel type and under what
conditions will you likely have long-range spotting? What types of
plans can you think
of for handling long-range spotting?
Is help available if necessary? What kinds of resources will you have
in place or
order to handle spot fires?
If fire behavior increases, is your position still defensible? Discuss
what type of action
you might take if a spot fire takes off.
Do you have more than one safety zone in case one gets cut off?
Describe how you
might have multiple safety zones.
Do the primary lookouts have a good view of the situation? Discuss who might be
acting as a lookout (e.g., crew member, air resources, etc.) and how
you will get
good information from that person. (Are you relying on an air attack
that is busy with
air tankers?)
Where are you in the burning period? Talk about how your tactics may vary from
finding spot fires early in the day to later into the evening. Review
Probability of
Ignition (PIG) and what it can tell you about spotting potential.
To reduce the risk, be ready to retreat. Keep your guard up even if
spotting has not
occurred for a few hours. Review fires where you have had frequent
spot fires and
what you learned about controlling them.
References:
Fireline Handbook
Incident Response Pocket Guide
Have an idea? Have feedback? Share it.
ONLINE | MAIL: 6 Minutes For Safety Subcommittee • 3833 S. Development
Ave • Boise, ID 83705 | FAX:
208-387-5250
6 Minutes HomeFires and Acres Yesterday
AREA BIA BLM FWS NPS ST/OT USFS TOTAL
Alaska
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Northwest
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Northern California
FIRES
ACRES
4
3
4
3
Southern California
FIRES
ACRES
1
7
0
28
8
98
2
1
11
134
Northern Rockies
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Eastern Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Western Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Southwest
FIRES
ACRES
1
0
1
0
Rocky Mountain
FIRES
ACRES
1
0
1
0
1
0
3
0
Eastern Area
FIRES
ACRES
2
1
2
1
Southern Area
FIRES
ACRES
8
5
0
34
8
39
TOTAL
FIRES
ACRES
2
0
1
0
1
7
0
28
22
107
3
35
29
177Fires and Acres Year-to-Date
AREA BIA BLM FWS NPS ST/OT USFS TOTAL
Alaska
FIRES
ACRES
1
465
43
408,261
38
108,250
29
169,044
489
633,213
9
1
609
1,319,234
Northwest
FIRES
ACRES
188
53,484
324
131,071
56
1,822
58
268
1,164
108,143
1,374
17,214
3,164
312,002
Northern California
FIRES
ACRES
144
139
38
633
1
48
20
6
3,168
73,434
807
84,113
4,178
158,373
Southern California
FIRES
ACRES
33
339
130
3,048
27
681
61
79,203
3,089
54,039
550
265,926
3,890
403,236
Northern Rockies
FIRES
ACRES
597
7,910
85
747
9
1,070
18
11,601
940
16,798
1,064
140,717
2,713
178,843
Eastern Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
70
315
719
310,684
1
0
38
250
655
40,407
673
430,763
2,156
782,419
Western Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
10
24,470
440
104,791
6
1
10
3
82
12,204
131
47,207
679
188,676
Southwest
FIRES
ACRES
555
47,405
202
6,852
31
3,335
95
1,810
576
45,317
1,104
211,004
2,563
315,723
Rocky Mountain
FIRES
ACRES
676
894
484
8,212
14
601
33
1,072
755
39,219
426
180,432
2,388
230,430
Eastern Area
FIRES
ACRES
335
7,205
39
996
27
87
5,070
34,691
162
1,275
5,633
44,254
Southern Area
FIRES
ACRES
98
10,561
80
13,475
17
1,445
10,106
114,984
358
11,911
10,659
152,376
TOTAL
FIRES
ACRES
2,707
153,187
2,465
974,299
302
130,279
406
264,789
26,094
1,172,449
6,658
1,390,563
38,632
4,085,566
*** Changes in some agency YTD acres reflect more accurate mapping or
reporting adjustments. ***
Ten Year Average Fires 60,190
Ten Year Average Acres 6,664,818Prescribed Fires and Acres Yesterday
AREA BIA BLM FWS NPS ST/OT USFS TOTAL
Alaska
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Northwest
FIRES
ACRES
1
94
3
59
4
153
Northern California
FIRES
ACRES
2
4
1
1
0
2
3
7
Southern California
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Northern Rockies
FIRES
ACRES
1
15
2
27
3
42
Eastern Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
0
1
0
1
Western Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
Southwest
FIRES
ACRES
1
30
1
30
Rocky Mountain
FIRES
ACRES
1
0
0
450
1
450
Eastern Area
FIRES
ACRES
1
47
1
47
Southern Area
FIRES
ACRES
2
85
2
85
TOTAL
FIRES
ACRES
0
0
1
30
3
98
1
1
2
16
8
670
15
815Prescribed Fires and Acres Year-to-Date
AREA BIA BLM FWS NPS ST/OT USFS TOTAL
Alaska
FIRES
ACRES
1
5
2
22
13
5,150
16
5,177
Northwest
FIRES
ACRES
7
5,593
35
9,097
14
820
3
67
118
28,326
177
43,903
Northern California
FIRES
ACRES
2
35
12
780
18
16,002
24
256
127
5,533
183
22,606
Southern California
FIRES
ACRES
5
38
9
760
4
298
1
120
141
4,875
160
6,091
Northern Rockies
FIRES
ACRES
18
1,448
13
2,904
24
6,747
2
156
96
1,093
187
13,293
340
25,641
Eastern Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
4
696
19
1,394
1
1
5
693
24
1,361
59
14,439
112
18,584
Western Great Basin
FIRES
ACRES
3
24
1
35
12
103
7
300
23
462
Southwest
FIRES
ACRES
19
19,320
23
12,226
5
1,372
1
10
84
18,958
132
51,886
Rocky Mountain
FIRES
ACRES
15
2,085
38
3,322
33
3,956
10
616
33
5,090
99
26,186
228
41,255
Eastern Area
FIRES
ACRES
22
23,169
257
32,603
53
4,799
786
31,859
172
16,091
1,290
108,521
Southern Area
FIRES
ACRES
56
15,415
108
47,720
16
5,957
11,401
584,139
909
867,245
12,490
1,520,476
TOTAL
FIRES
ACRES
143
67,761
148
29,785
471
110,021
120
12,874
12,366
628,915
1,903
995,246
15,151
1,844,602
*** Changes in some agency YTD acres reflect more accurate mapping or
reporting adjustments. ***
Additional wildfire information is available through the Geographic
Areas at http://gacc.nifc.gov/.
This report contains information derived from the National Fire and
Aviation Management Web Applications (FAMWEB)
system and other sources to provide relative information about
emerging and ongoing incident activity. This information is
considered operational in nature, is subject to change, and therefore
may not match official year-to-date agency records.
** National Interagency Coordination Center **

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