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09-06-2020, 02:57 PM
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#1
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: North of Seattle, WA
Posts: 17,362
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Boondocking during wildfire season------
This appears to be another huge wildfire season out west. I'm getting ready to head out for a couple of week long boondocking trips that will take me into our state's National Forests that are not just dry, but the forecast calls for not just high heat but 20-30 mph winds in some areas. Two fires are burning currently in our main NF, one LARGE and one small. Both will be a safe distance from me and my campgrounds have good emergency egress routes.
I look for campsites that have water next to them and I was always taught to have a bucket and shovel with me. Check and check for my next trips. I also check both for nearby incidents and weather reports before going. I also prefer to leave my trailer hooked up although should leveling be an issue I merely unhitch and pull the truck about a foot forward so I can lift or lower tongue if necessary. Makes for a quicker hookup and "bug-out" if necessary.
My question is what do others do to make sure they're safe during the fire season where they are boondocking?
__________________
"A wise man can change his mind. A fool never will." (Japanese Proverb)
"You only grow old when you run out of new things to do"
2018 Flagstaff Micro Lite 25BDS
2023 f-150 SCREW XLT 3.5 Ecoboost (The result of a $68,000 oil change )
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09-06-2020, 04:06 PM
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#2
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2018
Location: TEXAS
Posts: 9,230
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We try to not camp where wildfires are close. An allergy to smoke means we camp far away. Please be careful, they are helicoptering people out of some of these areas. Since fire travels uphill and that's where the evacuation roads were located, there was no escape except by air.
However, we always camp with a good weather radio and a local radio (hopefully tv) and always know what county we are camped in. We also find the local tv station on our phones.
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2015 Dynamax REV 24TB class C
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09-06-2020, 04:11 PM
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#3
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Just as confused as you
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: south central Wisconsin
Posts: 5,108
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Always have plenty of beer, if worse comes to worse you can pee on it.
__________________
Richard & Jill
2014 Flagstaff 832IKBS Classic Super Lite
2018 Silverado 1500 Crew Cab Z71 4WD All Star Edition
Camping since 1989, Seasonal since 2000.
Car Shredder Op/Tech, Scrap Metal Recycling - retired
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09-06-2020, 04:24 PM
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#4
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: North of Seattle, WA
Posts: 17,362
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Reverse_snowbird
We try to not camp where wildfires are close. An allergy to smoke means we camp far away. Please be careful, they are helicoptering people out of some of these areas. Since fire travels uphill and that's where the evacuation roads were located, there was no escape except by air.
However, we always camp with a good weather radio and a local radio (hopefully tv) and always know what county we are camped in. We also find the local tv station on our phones.
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I'm with you on the first part. Closest fire (right now) is over 100 miles from my camping area on Tuesday. That said, I am in the woods, they're dry, and fires seem to start wherever they want (sometimes with help from humans).
The evacuations in CA were what started me thinking more about egress routes. In both of my planned camping areas they are downhill and on roads that aren't overgrown with timber or brush like some roads I've ventured up/down.
I wish a weather radio would be useful where I camp but for some reasons it doesn't want to work in the mountain valleys. Ditto for Cell Service.
As for smoke, campfires often produce more smoke at ground level than distant fires although I've found California can certainly belie that.
__________________
"A wise man can change his mind. A fool never will." (Japanese Proverb)
"You only grow old when you run out of new things to do"
2018 Flagstaff Micro Lite 25BDS
2023 f-150 SCREW XLT 3.5 Ecoboost (The result of a $68,000 oil change )
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09-06-2020, 04:53 PM
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#5
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2019
Location: Simi Valley, CA
Posts: 131
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Boondocking during wildfire season------
Great conversation - with many interesting thoughts shared.
While no two situations are alike, I remind my family and friends that camping within eye (even distant smoke) sight of any wildfire is a reason to take pause, and the notion of anyone evacuating a strange area along dark, smoke filled remote roadways is a recipe for disaster.
That much offered, please remember your RV has no value. None. It’s the people in and near it that are priceless. Don’t hesitate to sacrifice your trailer, towed vehicle, motorhome and every possession - all of it, if it means you getting away safely and early.
Speaking from professional experience: When wildfire threatens, leave early. You don’t need permission to evacuate - and if you’re waiting for someone to tell you, you’re waiting too long.
Please be safe - and be #ReadyForWildfire! At home and away.
https://www.readyforwildfire.org/pre...cuation-guide/
Mr Brian
__________________
Mr. Brian
2020 Forest River Forester 3011 DSF
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09-06-2020, 05:00 PM
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#6
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: North of Seattle, WA
Posts: 17,362
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Brian
Great conversation - with many interesting thoughts shared.
While no two situations are alike, I remind my family and friends that camping within eye (even distant smoke) sight of any wildfire is a reason to take pause, and the notion of anyone evacuating a strange area along dark, smoke filled remote roadways is a recipe for disaster.
That much offered, please remember your RV has no value. None. It’s the people in and near it that are priceless. Don’t hesitate to sacrifice your trailer, towed vehicle, motorhome and every possession if it means you getting away safely. Safely and early.
Speaking from professional experience: When wildfire threatens, leave early. You don’t need permission to evacuate - and if you’re waiting for someone to tell you, you’re waiting too long.
Please be safe - and be #ReadyForWildfire! At home and away.
https://www.readyforwildfire.org/pre...cuation-guide/
Mr Brian
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Wise words.
__________________
"A wise man can change his mind. A fool never will." (Japanese Proverb)
"You only grow old when you run out of new things to do"
2018 Flagstaff Micro Lite 25BDS
2023 f-150 SCREW XLT 3.5 Ecoboost (The result of a $68,000 oil change )
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09-06-2020, 05:09 PM
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#7
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Part-Time Campground Host
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 3,187
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While stationed at Ft Lewis in the early 80s we use to Boondock a lot near Snoqualmie and White Pass (Dog Lake, La WisWis, etc). Loved those areas and the fishing was great. I hate to see that the Wildfires are an issue now. We never seemed to have any problems.
Wish you the best on your upcoming camping trips.
__________________
Craig & Cath
2018 2902WS Rockwood Ultra Lite (with tons of Mods)
2022 F250 Lariat Super Cab, 7.3 gas w/10 Spd Xmsn
Equalizer Hitch w/4-Point Sway Control
Days camped since 2015(retirement): 1687
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09-06-2020, 05:52 PM
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#8
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Deer Park, WA
Posts: 313
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We are leaving Tuesday for a two week trip to South Dakota and Eastern Montana. Our first stop is in Bozeman MT and just this morning on the news a new wildfire with evacuations near Bozeman was reported. The fire is burning just NE of town but I believe out RV park is closer to town.
Not the boondocking type of trip, this is more of a tourist/sightseeing trip so we are staying in RV parks. However, mostly our local camping is either on our own property or campgrounds, both are in the forest. Like you I always carry a bucket and shovel but mostly I pay close attention to the surrounding area. I live rural in a wooded area so fire safety is always on my mind. I like Mr. Brian’s comment on you don’t need permission to evacuate. I have a list handy here at home with reminders of everything to grab in a level 3 evacuation because I know under the stress of a close by fire I’ll forget something.
Funny story, Shortly after hearing about the Bozeman fire I received an email from the Bozeman RV park. My first thought was, “oh crap, the park is being evacuated”. But it was just a reservation reminder, whew!
Enjoy your trip and hopefully we will get some rain soon.
__________________
2023 Forester 2851 SLE
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09-06-2020, 07:11 PM
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#9
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PhD, Common Sense
Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: Fairborn, OH
Posts: 1,384
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While an RV has no value relative to lives, it is an amazing tool for saving lives—if you evacuate early, and don’t wait for the disaster to be at you retractable doorstep.
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09-07-2020, 01:31 PM
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#10
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2018
Location: Raleigh, NC
Posts: 9,621
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Fire drill?
This is somewhat related.
Has any family attempted an RV fire drill? Almost all of us have that funny window with the red handle. It's often over the bed, and the sill is probably six feet from the ground.
Your first impulse would be to belly-crawl prone to the window and just dive out--a recipe to drop six feet land on your head. On reflection, I would like to go feet first, bend at the hip and let my legs hang down, grasp the sill and lower myself to the ground.
Has anyone tried this?
Has anyone practiced this?
How about the rest of the family? DW? Kids?
I come from an industrial environment where OSHA required annual fire drills--and they were timed. If the evacuation took too long, we did it again. It seems foolhardy to not practice this in the trailer, at least once.
__________________
Larry
"Everybody's RV is not like your RV."
"Always take pictures with the button on the right."
"Always bypass the water heater before opening the low-point drains."
Sticks and Bricks: Raleigh, NC
2008 Cherokee 38P: at Ivor, VA permanently
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09-07-2020, 01:31 PM
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#11
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 1,758
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I would think about subscribing to the local Nixle for the area in case it might work.
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09-07-2020, 02:53 PM
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#12
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2016
Location: ALASKA (World's Biggest Campground)
Posts: 6,755
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Wildfires are nothing to fool with. Here in Alaska there are normally Wildlife Troopers in the areas where campers are. They will let you know when it's time to go. We've had good luck with walkie-talkies using the NOAA channel, but situational awareness is key. Do your due diligence before you select a campsite. Here is a State Campground from last August. Everyone got evacuated to the highway. This damage was done in less than 30 seconds from the onset.
__________________
'07 K3500 Silverado LT Crew Duramax (LBZ)
2016 Salem 27RKSS
1984 CHEV SCOTTSDALE K20 2GCGK24J0E1XXXXXX (Chevrolet Legends-Class of 2019)
"...exhaust fluid? We don't need no stinkin' exhaust fluid"
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09-07-2020, 05:52 PM
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#13
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Multi-Slacker
Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: SoCal
Posts: 2,279
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I live just a few miles from the El Dorado fire currently raging in San Bernardino County and the smoke pall is bothersome. Got caught once needing to evacuate and could not because of traffic. All of which is to say one should take all the precautions laid out by Mike in his post and mostly to say if you think you maybe need to go , you are already too late.
Just get up and go and camp some where else or go home, but GO.
El Dorado Fire: https://patch.com/california/banning...campaign=alert
__________________
Safe Travels
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09-07-2020, 07:33 PM
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#14
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: North of Seattle, WA
Posts: 17,362
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Larry-NC
This is somewhat related.
Has any family attempted an RV fire drill? Almost all of us have that funny window with the red handle. It's often over the bed, and the sill is probably six feet from the ground.
Your first impulse would be to belly-crawl prone to the window and just dive out--a recipe to drop six feet land on your head. On reflection, I would like to go feet first, bend at the hip and let my legs hang down, grasp the sill and lower myself to the ground.
Has anyone tried this?
Has anyone practiced this?
How about the rest of the family? DW? Kids?
I come from an industrial environment where OSHA required annual fire drills--and they were timed. If the evacuation took too long, we did it again. It seems foolhardy to not practice this in the trailer, at least once.
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The escape window in my TT is directly across from the entry door. Unless the fire is directly outside the door there would be no difference between using door or escape window. That said my escape window is very convenient for a feet first exit.
A "Fire Drill" for me would be a solitary event. Not even a dog to account for.
On this note, I have purchased and keep handy a much larger Fire Extinguisher than what comes with most RV's.
One like this:
$69 on amazon and the 10# size is only $19 more than a 5# size ($50).
The fire extinguisher that comes with most RV's may be OK for putting out a fire that starts in your frying pan but once it spreads it's a little wimpy. Perhaps my "10 pounder" is a little large but it still fits in the same corner and I'd rather have an extinguisher that's too big for any fire I might have than too small. Better yet, no fire to begin with.
__________________
"A wise man can change his mind. A fool never will." (Japanese Proverb)
"You only grow old when you run out of new things to do"
2018 Flagstaff Micro Lite 25BDS
2023 f-150 SCREW XLT 3.5 Ecoboost (The result of a $68,000 oil change )
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09-07-2020, 09:37 PM
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#15
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Bakersfield, CA
Posts: 63
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We always considered our old TT to be an integral part of our emergency evacuation plan. Fortunately, we had an RV spot for it at home. Every time we came home from camping, the black and grey tanks were emptied and the fresh water tank was filled. The vehicles were always at least half full. We had an extra full propane tank at home we could throw in if needed. We always had canned and dry foods on board which we rotated on a regular basis. We also had extra clothing, bedding, etc.
We lived in the Sierra Nevada foothills between Sacramento and Lake Tahoe. We never were required to evacuate but whenever we heard of a fire anywhere near us, we would go ahead and load up just like it was an evacuation order, just in case it started looking bad. I would back the pickup along side of the garage, load up the generator, fuel cans, spare water cans, then back up to the TT, hitch up and pull into the driveway ready to go. In the meanwhile, the DW would have pulled the 72 hour packs from by the door and put them into her car, load up the cats in their carriers and put them in the car and was ready to pull out. Total time: 8 minutes.
Unfortunately, we moved 14 months ago to Bakersfield, CA and live in a house with an HOA that won’t let you park your TT in front of the house for more than 4 hours. Since the old trailer was getting long in the tooth and didn’t have all the powered niceties someone in their 70’s appreciates we got rid of the TT. That lasted for about a year, then we couldn’t stand it any longer and just got a new TT. We have it in a storage lot about 2 miles down the road. Problem is the gate is only open from 7 am to 7 pm, so it’s not as convenient, but it’s better than nothing.
__________________
Paul & Sherida Hodel and Coco Chanel, the Chocolate Cockapoo and the family's prized possession!
New TT: 2021 Rockwood Ultra Lite 2608BS, 570 watts of solar + 300 AH of Battle Borne lithium batteries.
TV: 2008 Chevy Silverado 1500
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09-08-2020, 12:17 AM
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#16
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: California
Posts: 7,616
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hatchdog
We are leaving Tuesday for a two week trip to South Dakota and Eastern Montana. Our first stop is in Bozeman MT and just this morning on the news a new wildfire with evacuations near Bozeman was reported. The fire is burning just NE of town but I believe out RV park is closer to town.
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I think you will be ok.
https://inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/article/7144/55155/
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09-08-2020, 01:34 AM
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#17
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2016
Location: Alaska
Posts: 1,831
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Quote:
Originally Posted by babock
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I like to use this website: US Forest Service BlueSky.
BlueSky shows the smoke trails of the forest fires. Last year (2019) I used it to plan a trip to areas clear of smoke.
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09-08-2020, 05:26 AM
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#18
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2017
Posts: 5,712
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So it appears...according to the news that the fire where all those campers had to be evacuated by helicopter....was started by a "Gender Reveal Party" ??
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09-08-2020, 05:38 AM
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#19
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Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2020
Posts: 28
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheWolfPaq82
So it appears...according to the news that the fire where all those campers had to be evacuated by helicopter....was started by a "Gender Reveal Party" ??
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Sad part is this is the second time I recall this happening.
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09-08-2020, 07:44 AM
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#20
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Deer Park, WA
Posts: 313
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Quote:
Originally Posted by babock
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Thanks for the update. My neighbor drove thru Bozeman yesterday on his way home from South Dakota and he said it was raining nicely. Good news for the folks there.
__________________
2023 Forester 2851 SLE
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