ultrarunner
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2004
- Messages
- 28,159
- Tractor
- Cat D3, Deere 110 TLB, Kubota BX23 and L3800 and RTV900 with restored 1948 Deere M, 1949 Farmall Cub, 1953 Ford Jubliee and 1957 Ford 740 Row Crop, Craftsman Mower, Deere 350C Dozer 50 assorted vehicles from 1905 to 2006
That is odd..... watching some of your orange-sky videos on the news...... you'd think you'd be choking on the smoke-smell by the look of that.
Forest fires that I've been nowhere near could be smelt a long way off..... and I don't have the greatest sense of smell. Probably big studies are done (ash is a fertilizer, for one thing), but I'd guess that ash doesn't usually travel as far as the "smell" particles - at least that's how small fires seem to behave.
Hopefully it clears soon..... what you really need is rain, but if that hits hard, that's a problem too.....
Rgds, D.
Two years ago the smoke was choking but huge fires upwind maybe 35 miles... no orange sky.
This time around it changes all the time but one explanation is the ash is carried by the jet stream from Oregon as much as 400 miles away... it is so high it blocks the sun and rains ash here.
Last Sunday I did change the oil and ran the EM 5000 for 20 minutes... drained fuel and replaced plus stabil marine...
Generator has to be about 30 years old now and never missed a beat... plus the red and chrome make a good combination.