Triunfo Park Fire
Nikolai
Registered Users Posts: 19,035 Major grins
I was driving my daughter and her friend from school around 6 pm when they mentioned some fire. Soon I have noticed it myself. Its bright orange light gave our quiet and usually peaceful Conejo Valley rather volcanic and generally inferno-ish look.
I dropped the girls at the house and I took off for a quick - half an hour, I told my wife:-) -look.
...
Two hours later I got back...:-)
...
Here are a few shots.
01: Crowd is silently watching the raging fire:
02: Fire blast:
03: Fireman in action (I know it's blurry, but I like it):
04: Fire Devil:
05: Fireman:
06: Large tree is on fire:
07: Fireman:
These pics (and some more) can also be found here:
http://nik.smugmug.com/gallery/2384696
And a slightly broader selection (including firetrucks!:-) is here:
http://nik.smugmug.com/gallery/2384697
Enjoy!
I dropped the girls at the house and I took off for a quick - half an hour, I told my wife:-) -look.
...
Two hours later I got back...:-)
...
Here are a few shots.
01: Crowd is silently watching the raging fire:
02: Fire blast:
03: Fireman in action (I know it's blurry, but I like it):
04: Fire Devil:
05: Fireman:
06: Large tree is on fire:
07: Fireman:
These pics (and some more) can also be found here:
http://nik.smugmug.com/gallery/2384696
And a slightly broader selection (including firetrucks!:-) is here:
http://nik.smugmug.com/gallery/2384697
Enjoy!
"May the f/stop be with you!"
0
Comments
Unfortunately in some parts of the world this is an all too often occurance.
Darwin, Australia
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Thanks!
You're right: unfortunately, our particular area recently became a fire magnet. Hardly 3 months since the last one hit the nearby Moorpark. I'm not even talking about small ones..:-(
Unfortunatly this was preventable. Before white man came to Australi, the Aboriginals burned land on a rotational basis. In the north here, this practice has returned, but down south, burning stopped 150 years ago.
Since then agriculture took over and in the high country, cattlemen would graze the stock from Spring to Fall. This kept the undergrouth down and the stockmen cleared areas of introduced vegitation like blackberries.
About 20 years ago the Green Movement had a campaign to remove the cattle. There was a protest group of farmers and "Friends of the High Country" which tried to keep the cattle their.
There reason was the cattle kept the undergrouth down etc.
Unfortunately the Greenies own and we now have nearly all the hight country burning!!!
As we changed the environment we have a responsibility to protect it as well, not just a nieve thought that all would be well if we removed ouselves from it.
Just my thoughts to a complex problem that effects many areas of the world not just here and CA.
Darwin, Australia
Nikon D2X, F5, 17-35 AFS f2.8, 50AFD f1.4, 50 AFD f1.8, 85 AFD f1.4, 200 AFS VR f2, SB800, Metz 60-CT1
http://www.bushwalkingholidays.com.au/html/compare.htm
http://www.travelnt.com/en/explore/darwin/
These really reflect the mood well. I too like your blurry fireman....it represents the fury of the fire and the hurry to put it out.
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Those fires are just over a large hill from my house, and the open space that it's burning in is the same open space that butts up to the back of my property. The fires were probably 1/4 mile away from my house. But the terrain and the winds were working in my favor. Having said that, I pulled out my drives and threw them in the car along with my photo gear, just in case things change today.
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I'm very relieved to know your property (as well as many others) wasn't damaged. Still, having this sort of things *that* close is no fun. I remember when the big fire (from couple of years ago, the one that scorched half of Simi) were 5 miles away my wife started packing...
Thanks!
I wonder if any of those would qualify for the "into the light" class ;-)
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That's really weird! I could see the lighted smoke from my house, which is like 6 miles away...
I guess sometimes it can be "too close" :-)
I hope your home continues to be safe, David.
Virginia
"A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know." Diane Arbus
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Yeah me too, it's a great shot.
I start basic firefighter training in two weeks. Guess I'll figure out what stuff like that is like soon.
www.morffed.com
Nik: great shots! I was just chatting with David last night and we was telling me about these fires. Even more shocking/stunning seeing these photos. Here's to good wind and rain for your area!
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
Thank you!
Thank you!
Good luck with your training!
No wind, please! Some rain - mebbe:-), but just to put the fires out
Thanks for looking!
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
Considering the area, there is no right direction.
So, no wind, *please*