12 June 2011 1000 | Meeting Notes

Wesley McBride

WALLOW UPDATE: Anyone in the Show Low area with an Android or iPhone that would be able to go to the meeting this evening at 6pm. I need helping getting the 6pm meeting streamed. Please let me know and we’ll get everything setup.

3 minutes ago ·  · Like ·

Wesley McBride

WALLOW UPDATE: 29 Structures

5 minutes ago ·  · Like ·

Wesley McBride

WALLOW UPDATE: Forest is still closed, we have active fires out there. Let’s let the firefighters do their job.

7 minutes ago ·  · Like ·

Wesley McBride

WALLOW UPDATE: Come back into town on HWY 60, 260 is still closed.

8 minutes ago ·  · Like ·

Wesley McBride

WALLOW UPDATE: People can return, but it is best not to return until the quality of air is improved. Elderly and very young are most susceptible to problems. Smoke concentration this high can cause respiratory issues/disease in children.

8 minutes ago ·  · Like ·

Wesley McBride

WALLOW UPDATE: Official lifting of the evacuation of Springerville, Eagar, and South Fork areas. Meeting @ 10am on 12 June 2011

12 June 2011 0800 | Official Wallow Update

June 12, 2011 0800 Briefing Meeting – NEW

06/12/2011 0500 MDT IR Flight Report:

The northern end was cooler tonight but still some heat in the Water Canyon with unburned fuels.  There was also heat along the Little Co River, but south of the burnout lines.

There was intense heat on the west side of the fire south of Greer south to the head of Black River.  The area around Reservation Lake had cooled down from the previous night.  There was some large growth with intense heat just north of Boogy Mtn along Road 25 and roads with in the Reservation.  Further south there was some large growth with intense heat in the Black River Valley at McDonald Creek.

The Southern portion of the fire continues to creep southward with moderate heat along most of the perimeter.

The Southwest area had some intense heat down to the confluence of the Blue River with Blue Creek. No heat was detected on the eastern side of the creek.

There was a large burnout operation on the east side of the fire along road 220. The finger stretched for several miles to the southeast. There was very little heat detected in the northeast side of the fire.

Laurie’s Magic | NASA Overlay 06/07

The image was made with infrared light. Bright red spots are actively burning areas, and darker red areas are freshly burned ground. Unburned forest and grassland is green, while sparsely planted earth or bare ground is pale pink. In many places, the fire has burned right to the edge of the forest. The image shows that the fire is intense: It has thoroughly burned the forest leaving few ribbons or patches of green in its wake.

Ed & Laurie’s IR/Mesh Goodness | 11 June 2011

Hi Wes –

Here are 7 more IR mesh maps based on the latest IR mosaic from 6/10 2301. They focus on the most active areas: Alpine, Greer, Blue.

There are 2 for the S Fork area.  SFork is by X Diamond Ranch and E_SFork is east of there along the Little Colorado.

There are 3 for the Greer area.  RRGreer is the River Reservoir area.  SGreer is the south end of the valley.  NGreer is just south of the 260.

There are 2 for the Alpine area.  TalWiWi is the area around Ted and Annie’s place and NAlpine is  NE of the Alpine residential area.

Laurie taught me how to do that so I’ll be helping now, too.

EDC3

Make-shift Air Filters | 11 June 2011

Wes,

 

We stayed in Eagar to protect our home.  We made makeshift air purifiers with box fans and 3M furnace filters rated for smoke.  Below is a picture of just one filter after 48 hours of service.  We’re running 3 of these 24 hours a day.  I wish AZDEQ would provide free respirators, box fans, and filters to those of us who stayed behind to protect our homes.  Instead, they issue warnings that the air quality is bad!
Thanks for WWW.WALLOW.US

 

John Qualtrough
Still in Eagar, AZ

Your Insurance questions, Answered!

Wes,

Thanks for your information and timely updates.  Most insurers, particularly after a disaster, are pretty good at responding and will have a claims team on site.  But issues may arise regarding adequacy of proof, valuation or coverage.  I’m a little old to work the fire lines, but I can and will help with insurance claims anyone may have from the fire.  Born and raised in Apache County, I am a lawyer with 30 years experience in insurance claims and am happy to guide anyone through the process and answer questions at no charge.

Office: 602-256-9400;

cell phone 480-444-9449,

or email: rlgreer@bwglaw.net 

Robert L. Greer