No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses!

   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #11  
Got any staple forming tricks?

All the best,

Peter
I use bolt cutters to cut the wires. Then I clamp a pipe in a bench vise. I grab each end of the wire and bend it around the pipe.
 
   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #12  
We get a few days of rain followed by weeks of dry.
I don't water lawns (well I did once last year).
I got a 16 gallon powered sprayer that I drag around with my lawn tractor. Regular hoses and containers for the pots of flowers on the decks and the mini garden.
All in about an hour , every other day.

Always lots of work during dry spells. The sprayer reduces the time by about an hour though.
 
   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #13  
Its an absolute joy to having it rain in my area of the PNW this year in late summer. Last seven years, was an egg walk, when the whole forest, just seemed to WANT to burn down in late summer, and I had to balance what the well could do, and what the 1,500 gal cistern could do to water stuff around the house. I can relax now. And do other things, than constantly think of fire prevention. Worked with the Forest Service as to what is defensible, and they said something I though was counter intuitive. You have to remove everything that can travel on fire with wind. Nothing else really matters. This was repeated over and over again. Clean the gutters and rake the ground cones up. This is like taking out all the pine cones, and leave a space round the house with out them. Pie cones, are by nature, designed to spread fire. And house fires start in the gutters, by flying lite bits, and the dry leaves in them. Its not the sides, that start, its the gutters and the roof that start.
 
   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #14  
Opposite here in VA. July was one of the wettest summer months I can remember.
Same thing here...soggiest summer I can recall. If we're lucky might get 2-3 days in a row when it doesn't rain. I'm starting to grow moss... :ROFLMAO:
Worked with the Forest Service as to what is defensible, and they said something I though was counter intuitive. You have to remove everything that can travel on fire with wind. Nothing else really matters. This was repeated over and over again. Clean the gutters and rake the ground cones up. This is like taking out all the pine cones, and leave a space round the house with out them. Pie cones, are by nature, designed to spread fire. And house fires start in the gutters, by flying lite bits, and the dry leaves in them. Its not the sides, that start, its the gutters and the roof that start.
Guess that makes sense when you think about it.
Very different climate/environment than we have around here.
 
   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #15  
They also said, Maples don't propagate fires the way conifers do. Maples tend to shield against crown fires. I thought just the opposite. They were most interested in thinning the lower smaller conifers. That they said were the ladders to crown fires. Interestingly, there is a barrier of Maples that surround my house. They said keep these as best you can. They couldn't give a Cert of compliance. Yet, just said, I was doing as good as could be expected, and a bit more. This I thought strange, but I guess they don't want to be sued later. I really wanted them to give some sort of Cert to show the home owner's insurance company that fuel load abatement had been completed to the satisfaction of the Forest Service, as local insurers are completely dropping, wild fire, coverage all over my area. :(
 
   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #16  
Ten years ago. Watermelon Hill wildfire. Started about 9 or 10 miles west of me. Went up on the neighbors bunn - type of hill left by ancient floods - and watched as the fire approached from a distance.

Could easily see the front and the wind blown "fire bombs". Large chunks of burning matter being blown up to a quarter mile ahead of the burning front.

Wind changed direction and all the work the farmers with their large tractors did - put the fire out.

It was a terrible wildfire season. All the heavy duty fire equipment was over in Wenatchee fighting another large fire.

All the local farmers became hero's. We all remember the summer of 2014. Every direction you traveled - there were wildfires.
 
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   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #17  
And its always some idiot with a dragging chain.
 
   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #18  
And it's always some idiot with a dragging chain.
Or a blown trailer tire on its rim...

Or ⚡...

Or 🕯️.

We just had one of those. Five ignition points on both sides of the road over a mile and a half. We spotted the fires within minutes of ignition, and the fire crews were on it quickly. The first chopper was dumping water within ten to twelve minutes of the first call. Two choppers went four hours looping around pulling water from local lakes, and dumping, trying to slow the spread in some very very difficult terrain. (60-70 degree brushy slopes.)

The fire crews were amazing, and noticeably better coordinated than three years ago, and it seems to have made a difference.

All the best,

Peter
 
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   / No rain in two weeks, all morning dragging hoses! #19  
When you get dry conditions - like we have now - it can be almost anything. 2014 was an exceptionally dry year.

Watermelon Hill was started by a couple fellows shooting at exploding rifle targets - Tannerite. A highway dept team started another. They were welding on a bridge railing and not watching where the slag went. Until the flames were lapping up around them.

A large number are started by lightning strikes.

Late summer can be a REALLY wild west show out here. And you don't even need your guns.
 

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