CALIFORNIA’S WILDFIRES

Despite the ranting and ravings of Governor Moonbeam, climate change has nothing to do with the latest series of California wildfire. The Governor’s claims reveal an antiquated state of mind from the 1960s – blame someone or something that nobody has any control over. A fact known to everyone in the California naturalist community is the prevailing climate condition in the state is drought. The Twentieth Century was the third wettest century of the last forty centuries i.e. (4,000 years). During the twentieth Century California’s population rose six times, approaching 40,000,000 human beings, yet going forward the state may face a century of drought.

No one knows the complete climate history of California e.g. if there is no rain over those Thirty-seven (37) centuries, is there wind? Wind is the primary cause for the spread of wildfires and the biggest threat to human habitation.

Wind and face combine with a nature policy (influenced by fire policies in national Parks). This policy has been endorsed by environmentalists and city-ecology-dwellers (true Monday morning quarterbacks). Let forests grow and when fire comes it can burn, just like nature intended. That policy might be acceptable when there were ten million people in California, but the let it-burn-policy needs reevaluation.

One reason for a change of policy is every National and State Forest is a tinderbox. A figure given out in this decade is four of five trees in California is dead, or dying, from drought, natural causes or infestation. Those trees cannot be removed because the nature policy, previously mentioned, forbids it.

Twice since 2009 the nature policy of letting fires burn in National Forests has been publicly enforced. The Station Fire in the Angeles National Forest burned many square miles of land under very favorable conditions for the fire fighters and most landowners abutting that forest. Not many houses were lost. However in December 2017 the Thomas Fire in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties has become the largest wildfire in California’s recorded history, as it denudes the land known as Los Padres National Forest. It still burns (440 square miles), with a projected snuff date in January 2018.

Another fact makes the National and State Forests tinder boxes, ready to burn whatever the weather. Because they have been left alone, those woods are overgrown with underbrush and trees. About a decade ago a report said there were four times as many trees in forests around Big Bear Lake, California, as the land could bear.

Going forward, California and the National Government need a reevaluation of forest policies other than continuing the let-it-burn policies used in the National Parks. After all the burning, California will be unlikely make its forests great again – what the forests once were and again susceptible to fire in the future. Now is the Twenty-First Century, and there are enough interested people in the state to plan and implement new forest policies. One policy for everyone and every place is likely wrong. There may have to be several or many policies, depending upon local conditions. And in the future California and the National government can make their forests less fire-prone, and welcoming for visitors.

MOVING

From California, to one state east. At one time Los Angeles was not congested; there was much going on. Now both activity and the press of people bother me. I believe the cause of my reaction is, nothing truly significant is happening in masses of people here; the future seems to repeat the past rather than present something different. However, my dissatisfaction may be represented by the quality of street surfaces. More than 20 percent of the streets in LA need to be dug up, reset and repaved.

Do I expect anything new in Nevada? No, but it is less congested, the streets are newer and better and fewer people are making scenes trying to get themselves noticed. Witness the guy who kissed and otherwise battered Brad Pitt. Did that happen in California? It seems the nonsense filling the news distracts Americans from anything or any work which is important and serious. A lot of that happens in California.

Nevada presents a different scene and culture. Entertainment is part of gambling there, and most of entertainment is live shows. It is a monopoly. I’m not a backstage guy or a career-ending businessman. No one tries to break-into entertainment from Nevada. It is a stop on the way to larger venues. But the headliners are truly excellent performers giving the audience something unique. Anyway, anyone looks at it, though, and no one can easily correct this analysis, the Rat Pack were merely further escapades of the Jerry [Lewis] and Dean [Martin] shows beginning after World War Two. So it is easy and accurate to say audiences can see excellent unique live performances in Nevada.

Do I have qualms about leaving California? Except for travel, I’ve lived here my entire life; most of my novels and stories are set here. It was a great state with 20 million; close and busy at 30 million; crowded and oppressive at 40 million. I don’t want to be here when they finish car pool lanes on a bunch of LA freeways, and the next step will be to Fast Trak each and require everyone to get a Transponder: Pay for the privilege of going 65 mph rather than be part of the truck traffic in the non-paying lanes. If everyone in Southern California cannot see payways rather than freeways are coming, they deserve to live here.

Alas, living in California eliminates the need to travel overseas and across borders. Why go and meet Asians, Latinos or anyone else when many of those people are already neighbors? Many Asian countries have enclaves, cities or regions: Koreatown, Westminister (Vietnamese), San Gabriel Valley (Chinese). It just isn’t east Asia: Armenians (Glendale); Beverly Hills have groups of Iranians. And Latinos, everywhere here from south of the southern border. I feel as though I’ve met many strangers and been immersed in foreign languages without leaving the homestead. Nevada will engage me with something unique: I’ll be the newcomer, and the adjustment for the natives will provide incidences I can observe.