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Basin Complex Fire Update (100% contained)

This update was prepared at 00:00 hours 8/7/2008.

INFO HOTLINE: (805) 961-5770

fire map http://www.geomac.gov fire map 

 info http://www.co.monterey.ca.us info

Mop-up and rehab efforts continue successfully.  It looks like base camp is going to be cleared out by Saturday August 9. Many firefighters commented that they had never, in their careers, seen a community with so much out-pouring of support.  They said that the donations and the support were incredible. They will always remember Big Sur, Carmel Valley, and Cachagua as, "nice folks.... but don't mess wid 'em...." Now their efforts are focused in/on other areas in California and the United States. We wish them well and send them off with a last, "Thank you."

Despite the fact that the Basin Fire is almost over, we still have to be vigilant about preventing fires in our district. Chip your brush piles. Maintain your defensible space around your home. Pay attention to weather and conditions. Be prepared for another fire to present itself; we live in Central California and wildfires are a real threat to us and our loved ones. It comes with the territory.

Good browsing:

Life in the Fire Lane by Kelly Erin O'brien (KUSP 88.9 and 91.7 FM)

Sitting with Fire by The Jamesburg Crew

Crews Wait for the Basin Fire to Approach by Kera Abraham

SPCA of Monterey County

 

Please continue to drive carefully. Remember to remember to slow down, @xx#%!!! always.

 

Buy a Basin Complex Fire T-shirt(s) for $20.00 each! Proceeds benefit the Cachagua Fire Volunteers, Big Sur Fire Brigade, and Mid Coast Fire Brigade. The shirts will be sold in Cachagua at  base camp, and at the Cachagua General Store. They are also being sold at the Chatterbox Restaurant and the Taqueria Del Valle in the Village, and at the PassionFish Restaurant in Pacific Grove.

Our local resident, Joleen Lambert Skinner, did the artwork. You will certainly want to help your local firefighters by purchasing a few T-shirts. This shirt reminds all of us that volunteerism is what makes the world go round. The earnings will help your local firefighters buy needed/new equipment. Proceeds also will go to a fund to assist the 25 year-old Havana Hotshot, Angela, who was injured working this fire.

Click to see image enlarged

Basin Shirt White

Buy Now!  

A special thanks goes out to CA-CFC-Task Force 7756 Lima, which is composed of the district's Heavy Equipment Division: 

7756 Lima Leader, Fire Chief Skee Stanley 
Dozer-7755 (D-5) Operator Tim Koster 
Dozer-7756 (D-6) Operator Terry Bishop 
Dozer-7757 (D-6) Operator Dean Coradray 
Dozer-7758 (D-6) Operator Callie King 

The district's dozer task force put in over 45 miles of firing and containment lines.

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More Info: 

http://www.fire.ca.gov

http://www.fs.fed.us/r5/lospadres/conditions/  

BE PREPARED for the future.

You are encouraged to call the Cachagua Fire Department with any concerns, questions, suggestions, and compliments by calling (831) 659-7700.

This update was prepared at 00:00 hours 8/7/2008.

 

A CFC story:

Cachagua's Torch 77 crew, composed of Skee Stanley, Terry Bishop, Tim Koster, Cassidy Johnson, and Dane Bonsper successfully "created some heat" with Terry's new TerraTorch that he built. It uses gasoline and a gelling agent to create the perfect flame-thrower.  Using the torch, our crew moved along the dozer line so efficiently that air operations asked us to slow down, so we stopped and waited for the helicopters to catch up. Thanks to the US Forest Service, Cal Fire and cooperating agencies, all fire crews on the lines were always safe. The operation ran smoothly. It was nice to see the system working so well. 100 ft. flames danced and swirled as they slowly, and then more rapidly, moved down the ridge away from our community. 

TerraTorch 77 a.k.a. Terry'Torch 77 was a stunning success. It created fire instantly and a heat draw that drew in the fire below, created later by the amazing helitorches. It was like an air-show and ballet combined, well maybe not... You'll have to see the photos (coming soon to this website).  Now, following Thursday's burn,  there is no fuel load to support a fire of any kind on the "black" side of the dozer lines. "Lower" and "Upper" Cachagua are now relatively safe from this fire.

The final quarter mile of hand line from below  the Stahl cabin to the reservoir  was back burned "by hand." Engineer Kevin Dixon from Cal Fire and Engineer Dane Bonsper from Cachagua Fire made access via canoe over the lake, reached the bottom of the hand line, and made their way, on foot, up the steep embankment. Using a gun that launches small flares and a drip-torch that uses a mix of gas and diesel, they began the back burn where the earlier bigger burn had stopped. 

Dixon and Bonsper made their way down the steep hand line toward the reservoir, lighting fire as they descended. Branch 23 gave the order to get back to the canoe, so they did, well in time to see the fire show that followed. The helitorches came in to finish the job a few minutes after the two had reached their designated safety zone across the reservoir. The drainage was burned, successfully completing the back burning operations in the containment efforts of this incredible fire, now a household name forever, The Basin Fire of '08.

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Cachagua Fire Protection District ~ P.O. Box 2090,Carmel Valley, CA   93924

on District ~ P.O. Box 2090, Carmel Valley, CA   93924