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Canadian Wildfire Coverage



Now some of the wildfire smoke from Canada are hitting the eastern United States resembles the time when Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay Area had wildfire smoke from nearby wildfires within the state back in 2020.


Here is a clip from 2020 about that fire from the epicenter and smoke spreading to San Francisco in that example.
 
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Here are local New York area Newscasts covering smoke coming from Canada and how its affecting the area. Yes this air quality resembles what California faced in 2020.


Here is Canada's response to the wildfires.
 

Here is more from Canada.



Here are local reports in Canada on the Wildfires hitting multiple provinces in the country.

 
I'll bet CBC, CTV, and Global are covering the English side of the story, while Radio-Canada has the French coverage to itself. (TVA & NooVoo have limited coverage outside La Belle Province.)
 
I hear a lot of those fires were caused by humans. *IF* any human caused these wildfires, they should be prosecuted and thrown in prison. Lock 'em up.
I do know some were caused by lightning.
 

Now Washington DC, Baltimore and Philadelphia issues Air Quality alert warnings. Crazy to think that wildfire smoke from Canada spreads further than we thought. Apparently the eastern half of Canada and United States have their version of the Santa Ana Winds.





Here is an explanation of the Santa Ana Winds for California.

 

Parts of Alberta is reporting another fire in Canada.
Well, I learned that in Canada they say "kill-oh-meeters" rather than the European "kihl-ahh-met-ehrs". But they surely do news better on the CBC than on any of the big three national networks in the US these days.

I went on to view
and was very impressed with the anchor, the delivery, writing and reporting throughout.
 
"The National," CBC's evening news, is the best network newscast in North America. An hour, nightly at 9 p.m. local time, 9:30 p.m. in Newfoundland and Labrador (Saturday on CBC's cable news channel only, because of hockey).
 
Thankfully northern Alberta is getting some nice rains today and tomorrow. And western WA will get several days' worth of showers at the end of the week, moving into the ID panhandle and western MT as the weekend goes on. A good steady rain will relieve the drought chances a little bit. We had a 1200-acre brush fire south of Mabton WA yesterday. Farm equipment sparking, or someone throwing out a cigarette, I'm sure. No lightning in this area yesterday afternoon.
 

Turns out multiple countries fire services have step in to fight the Alberta fires. United States, New Zealand, South Africa, Chile and Costa Rica steps in to join and help Alberta Firefighters.
 
Hope for the best in Canada over wildfires. But dang never considered this one where smoke from wildfires can travel that far from the points of origins to other countries.
It happens. About 25 years ago the sky above Houston was totally filled with smoke from fires in the state of Veracruz, México. The fire was so big that it caused Houston to be under "dangerous air" conditions for over a week.
 
It happens. About 25 years ago the sky above Houston was totally filled with smoke from fires in the state of Veracruz, México. The fire was so big that it caused Houston to be under "dangerous air" conditions for over a week.
I recall that, and it was quite bizarre. Similar conditions have happened several times over the years. Sometimes it was initially unclear what the source was.
 
I recall that, and it was quite bizarre. Similar conditions have happened several times over the years. Sometimes it was initially unclear what the source was.
It was, indeed, a bit more extensive than the guy in the next room lighting up a blunt...
 


Canada's Northwest Territories are facing another wildfire threat.

 
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