Update from Sgt. Stein – 7 June 2011 @ 1800

I am listening to the live feed from the town hall meeting… I just
wanted to let you know I am still seeing high winds this evening and
very high winds tomorrow all during the day. So I don’t fully agree
with what he is saying about the weather. Wind will remain high
between 28-38mph tonight coming down int eh morning and then high
again tomorrow afternoon. If you have any question please pleas please
fel free to ask.

BLOG UPDATE @ 6/7/2011 – 12:30am

Posted to Facebook – I would like to apologize for any advertising that was shown before the stream came on when you logged on. I need everyone that is following http://wallow.us/ to know I am NOT in any way attempting to monetize this. I pay for a pro account on Justin.tv to remove ads that would play during the stream and interrupt your viewing experience. I apologize they play an ad before the stream begins. I in no way am trying to make any money on this terrible situation that we are in. I was saddened to see comments that would suggest something like that. Thanks for logging on, you are the entire and only reason that I’m doing this.

Sgt. Stein explains his forecasting – 7 June 2011 @ 1051

Wesley

Thanks for taking a look at the products I sent you. I do a lot of
Fire Forecast for the Camp Pendleton area during fire season so I have
a lot of background here.

So this is what we are seeing with the fire on a big scale. Right now
the general wind direction is from the Southwest to the Northeast,
this is due to the pressure gradient caused by a Low over Montana and
strong High over the Gulf states. This is almost a reverse of what
Southern California knows as the Santa Annas. Although the general
wind flow is to the northeast the winds in the valleys could be
completely different and here is why. As wind sinks into a valley they
are funneled in the direction that the valley is going. Using the
latest version of Google earth I am able to see that the two most
northern “fingers” of the fire are following valley orientated in the
more North-Northwest direction, that is why we have not see them push
as far east as we are all hoping. But keep in mind that big fires kind
of create their weather patterns so truly being able to forecast what
is going on right at the fire’s front is very hard.
Over the next few days starting mainly Thursday we will see the Low
pressure over Montana began to weaken and move to the East as the High
pressure over the Gulf States remain in its position but weakens also.
This will give a break in the high winds and bring the temps down a
bit. Then over the weekend we could see winds pick back up again, but
not reach the speeds we are seeing now. Relative Humidity also plays a
big part in the fire. As of right now I don’t a any big changes in the
RH as the area will stay very dry.
In my personal opinion we will see more extreme fire growth over the
next 36-48 hours as most are saying. The chances of the fire to
advance further towards Eagar are likely as the wind patterns in the
fire will be hard to forecast.

I hope this helps a little. If you have any questions feel free to
forward them to me.

Gary Stein

Sgt. Stein Marine Meteorologist sent this – 7 June 2011 @ 0955


I Have been calling Eagar my home away from since my in-laws moved there in 2005, but I have lived in AZ my whole life. Currently I am in my 8th year in the Marine Corps where I just happen to be a Meteorologist and Specialize in Fire Weather and Wildfire Forecasting. I Took the map that you posted this morning and overlayed some exact distances from the fire the Eagar Library. Thought you might like it. I am also working on a Fire Forecast to forward to you.

Message & Picture from the field – 7 June 2011 @ 0922 hours

This picture was taken by Dave’s daughters friend who is a Sun Lakes firefighter working on the Wallow fire. They were assigned to our houses last night and he said that the fire went high and went around our houses; sounds like our places are safe for now. He told Dave that the fire was on CR2116 (road just south of Nelson’s res.) last night; might have some damages up there.

Don…

BLOG UPDATE @ 6/7/2011 – 7:51am

The last 24 hours have definietly been a unique experience. I dedicated all of my efforts outside of my job to trying to help with communications on the fire (mostly through Facebook, Twitter, and http://www.wallow.us. It has been such an intense time, but an amazing experience. Yesterday I helped the local call center located at the school’s District Office get properly segmented and secured with their data network. I installed an Untangle box which is doing most of the work for me now. Once they were back up and running I got ready for the live stream which was a whole other experience. Trying to live blog and run a camera at the same time is not an easy task. I hope that the stream was useable enough that it was beneficial for people. At the peak of the meeting I noticed 1740 people watching it live. I’m not sure if that was the highest number, but the highest that I saw. At midnight while reading through the amazing emails that I got from people all over the country I pulled up the analytics for my blog, and saw that i had over 10,000 views yesterday. I hope that this site is helping out, and hope I can continue to provide accurate information to everyone affected by this fire. Thank you for making this such a beneficial experience.

BLOG UPDATE @ 6/6/2011 – 8:30am

My blog is getting hijacked for the time being to provide information, photos, and videos of the Wallow Fire currently burning south of my hometown. Please share this website with others. If you have something you’d like me to add please contact me in whichever way you’d like. Facebook, Twitter, or just leave me a comment on this post.

Wallow Comments (OLD)

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