It began over the weekend, but this morning a wildfire in the rugged country just north of Sedona, Arizona, has closed Highway 89A out of town to Flagstaff and threatens to sneak into the Oak Creek Canyon area there. This is some of the most beautiful country in the world, and more than 500 homes and businesses have been asked to evacuate.
Check out the fire on any of several online webcams that you can find under Sedona Webcams.
More to come on this one...especially if it reaches the true Oak Creek canyon country north and east of town.
New Fire North Of Sedona AZ
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K.
- azskyman
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 4104
- Joined: Thu Mar 13, 2003 7:36 am
- Location: Scottsdale Arizona
- Contact:
New Fire North Of Sedona AZ
0 likes
- weatherbee1982
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 34
- Joined: Tue Jun 20, 2006 2:16 am
- Location: Tucson, AZ
- Contact:
Like I said on another board, forest thinning methods would have been quite useful in preventing this fire. Unfortunately, the models look to indicate that conditions will only get drier, with the possibility of dry thunderstorms later in the week.
Last edited by weatherbee1982 on Tue Jun 20, 2006 10:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
0 likes
- azskyman
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 4104
- Joined: Thu Mar 13, 2003 7:36 am
- Location: Scottsdale Arizona
- Contact:
Hi Steve....that's why I didn't get specific. Just "general" web cam sites that pop up under google.
Fire weather will be the most extreme of the season over the next week or two, so it will be a challenge to keep new ones from starting and contain those that have.
I heard this morning that ALL of the Coconino National Forest will be closed starting Friday.
Fire weather will be the most extreme of the season over the next week or two, so it will be a challenge to keep new ones from starting and contain those that have.
I heard this morning that ALL of the Coconino National Forest will be closed starting Friday.
0 likes
- Aslkahuna
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 4550
- Joined: Thu Feb 06, 2003 5:00 pm
- Location: Tucson, AZ
- Contact:
Yep, the official reasons given were the extreme fire danger and the difficulty of evacuating people out but the real reason is that they don't want any people at all in the area-not with the 4th of July coming up. There hasn't been any lightning in AZ since about June 7th so everything that has started since is people caused. Basically it supports my opinion that collectively the Human Race is stupid and proof that God CAN make a mistake.
Steve
Steve
0 likes
- azsnowman
- Category 5
- Posts: 8591
- Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:56 pm
- Location: Pinetop Arizona. Elevation 7102' (54 miles west of NM border)
Aslkahuna wrote:Yep, the official reasons given were the extreme fire danger and the difficulty of evacuating people out but the real reason is that they don't want any people at all in the area-not with the 4th of July coming up. There hasn't been any lightning in AZ since about June 7th so everything that has started since is people caused. Basically it supports my opinion that collectively the Human Race is stupid and proof that God CAN make a mistake.
Steve
God makes MISTAKES?????? Naaaa.......well, "There IS proof in the puddin'" ain't there?

0 likes
- azsnowman
- Category 5
- Posts: 8591
- Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:56 pm
- Location: Pinetop Arizona. Elevation 7102' (54 miles west of NM border)
The fire is now in Sterling Canyon, I'm watching it on tv right now......."if" this fire breaks over the top of Sterling Canyon it could continue it's way to I-17 and threaten Munds Park and Kachina Village.
http://www.azcentral.com
Brins Fire pushes beyond crews' line
Judi Villa and Monica Alonzo-Dunsmoor
The Arizona Republic
Jun. 22, 2006 12:00 AM
SEDONA - A stubborn wildfire that has been chewing through the picturesque terrain of northern Arizona's Oak Creek Canyon marched out of control northward Wednesday, breaching Sterling Canyon and jumping the trail fire crews had hoped would stop it.
The northern spread came as firefighters got their first toehold on the eastern flank of the Brins Fire, after setting their own fires to stanch the flames as they hit Arizona 89A. As of Wednesday night, none of the flames had jumped the highway as firefighters initially feared.
"We met it head to head, and we made some progress in this area," said Mark Koontz, a division supervisor working Wednesday along the highway. "But given the weather and what's still burning up there, we haven't quite turned the corner yet. It's just slow going up there." advertisement
On Wednesday, one of the most problematic areas was the northern flank of the fire, where winds blew embers into the trees, sending flames past the point where firefighters had hoped to stop the forward march. The fire was moving along the upper ridges of the canyon's western wall, with fingers that looked like tiny campfires extending lower into the canyon. By nightfall, it had traveled about 250 acres north of where it breached the trail.
Firefighters said the next logical place for them to build containment lines in the steep, rugged wilderness was along the Bootlegger Trail, nearly two miles north of where it breached. The lines have to be dug in the dirt by hand.
Hundreds of homes, picnic areas, campgrounds, hiking trails and the popular Slide Rock State Park remain, potentially, in the fire's path. Firefighters hope to keep the flames from dipping down into the canyon by digging containment lines where it's possible, clearing out brush and laying down hose lines.
"If we don't get out ahead of this, it's going to beat us to the punch every day," Incident Commander Paul Broyles said.
The fire grew Wednesday to 2,456 acres. It is 7 percent contained.
Since the Brins Fire started Sunday, it has been slowly creeping up and down mountains and ridges, staying mostly on the ground, instead of climbing into the trees and jumping through treetops.
But the rugged terrain has made it difficult for firefighters to attack the blaze from the ground. On the eastern side, firefighters had only "one place to stop it," Arizona 89A, said Tony DeMasters, another division supervisor.
"We have to let the fire come to us," DeMasters said.
More than 600 firefighters are battling the blaze, with nine helicopters dropping water from above.
On Wednesday, two 20-member hotshot crews were dropped off by helicopter into strategic points within the fire. But after several hours of trying to put in containment lines, those crews were pulled out because the fire had flared.
Today, fire crews will focus efforts at the trail the fire breached and along Bootlegger Trail to prevent further spreading.
"We hit it hard all day long, and we're going to try again for Sterling Canyon," said Kole Berriochoa, one of the officials managing the fire.
The farther north the fire travels, the more likely it is to dip into the canyon, putting businesses and homes at risk and possibly jumping Arizona 89A. Two air tankers will drop fire retardant, and crews will hike into the canyon and attack the fire from different angles.
"They're working in dirt, smoke, difficult terrain," said Steve Markason, who manages the helicopter base at the Sedona Airport. "It's dirty, hot and, physically, it's a lot of work."
http://www.azcentral.com
Brins Fire pushes beyond crews' line
Judi Villa and Monica Alonzo-Dunsmoor
The Arizona Republic
Jun. 22, 2006 12:00 AM
SEDONA - A stubborn wildfire that has been chewing through the picturesque terrain of northern Arizona's Oak Creek Canyon marched out of control northward Wednesday, breaching Sterling Canyon and jumping the trail fire crews had hoped would stop it.
The northern spread came as firefighters got their first toehold on the eastern flank of the Brins Fire, after setting their own fires to stanch the flames as they hit Arizona 89A. As of Wednesday night, none of the flames had jumped the highway as firefighters initially feared.
"We met it head to head, and we made some progress in this area," said Mark Koontz, a division supervisor working Wednesday along the highway. "But given the weather and what's still burning up there, we haven't quite turned the corner yet. It's just slow going up there." advertisement
On Wednesday, one of the most problematic areas was the northern flank of the fire, where winds blew embers into the trees, sending flames past the point where firefighters had hoped to stop the forward march. The fire was moving along the upper ridges of the canyon's western wall, with fingers that looked like tiny campfires extending lower into the canyon. By nightfall, it had traveled about 250 acres north of where it breached the trail.
Firefighters said the next logical place for them to build containment lines in the steep, rugged wilderness was along the Bootlegger Trail, nearly two miles north of where it breached. The lines have to be dug in the dirt by hand.
Hundreds of homes, picnic areas, campgrounds, hiking trails and the popular Slide Rock State Park remain, potentially, in the fire's path. Firefighters hope to keep the flames from dipping down into the canyon by digging containment lines where it's possible, clearing out brush and laying down hose lines.
"If we don't get out ahead of this, it's going to beat us to the punch every day," Incident Commander Paul Broyles said.
The fire grew Wednesday to 2,456 acres. It is 7 percent contained.
Since the Brins Fire started Sunday, it has been slowly creeping up and down mountains and ridges, staying mostly on the ground, instead of climbing into the trees and jumping through treetops.
But the rugged terrain has made it difficult for firefighters to attack the blaze from the ground. On the eastern side, firefighters had only "one place to stop it," Arizona 89A, said Tony DeMasters, another division supervisor.
"We have to let the fire come to us," DeMasters said.
More than 600 firefighters are battling the blaze, with nine helicopters dropping water from above.
On Wednesday, two 20-member hotshot crews were dropped off by helicopter into strategic points within the fire. But after several hours of trying to put in containment lines, those crews were pulled out because the fire had flared.
Today, fire crews will focus efforts at the trail the fire breached and along Bootlegger Trail to prevent further spreading.
"We hit it hard all day long, and we're going to try again for Sterling Canyon," said Kole Berriochoa, one of the officials managing the fire.
The farther north the fire travels, the more likely it is to dip into the canyon, putting businesses and homes at risk and possibly jumping Arizona 89A. Two air tankers will drop fire retardant, and crews will hike into the canyon and attack the fire from different angles.
"They're working in dirt, smoke, difficult terrain," said Steve Markason, who manages the helicopter base at the Sedona Airport. "It's dirty, hot and, physically, it's a lot of work."
0 likes
- bvigal
- S2K Supporter
- Posts: 2276
- Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2005 8:49 am
- Location: British Virgin Islands
- Contact:
Look for Morning Briefing on this site:
http://gacc.nifc.gov/swcc/predictive/in ... igence.htm
sitrep on all fires - this morning's report:
http://www.nifc.gov/nicc/sitreprt.pdf
http://gacc.nifc.gov/swcc/predictive/in ... igence.htm
sitrep on all fires - this morning's report:
http://www.nifc.gov/nicc/sitreprt.pdf
0 likes
Return to “USA & Caribbean Weather”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests