JPrater Veteran 456 Posts user info edit post |
Lots of smoke or something in the air around the Gorman/Avent Ferry area. Anybody know why? 6/12/2008 1:25:50 PM |
quagmire02 All American 44225 Posts user info edit post |
burning the bodies of the hookers who demanded payment, when the pleasure of my penis should have been enough 6/12/2008 1:27:01 PM |
ambrosia1231 eeeeeeeeeevil 76471 Posts user info edit post |
hmm
sizable wildfire to the east winds coming from the east
I WONDER 6/12/2008 1:27:08 PM |
Str8BacardiL ************ 41753 Posts user info edit post |
BASTARD BEAT ME TO IT 6/12/2008 1:27:57 PM |
Jax883 All American 5562 Posts user info edit post |
Good to see you guys are staying on top of current events. 6/12/2008 1:29:02 PM |
Jax883 All American 5562 Posts user info edit post |
This was from last week at one of our houses in Rodanthe. These pictures were taken around noon that day:
6/12/2008 1:41:39 PM |
se7entythree YOSHIYOSHI 17377 Posts user info edit post |
no, nobody knows why there's smoke
especially not anyone in the You can smell the smoke outside... thread 6/12/2008 1:46:10 PM |
Cherokee All American 8264 Posts user info edit post |
wildfire near washington nc i think 6/12/2008 1:48:24 PM |
jessiejepp All American 2732 Posts user info edit post |
its all over campus now, too. 6/12/2008 1:48:49 PM |
se7entythree YOSHIYOSHI 17377 Posts user info edit post |
man you people are sllloowwww
message_topic.aspx?topic=529520
[Edited on June 12, 2008 at 1:50 PM. Reason : ] 6/12/2008 1:49:27 PM |
pttyndal WINGS!!!!! 35217 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Wildfire smoke, odor reach Triangle Wildfire smoke, odor reach Triangle
Posted: Jun. 11 10:40 p.m. Updated: Today at 12:21 p.m.
Columbia, N.C. — State crews checked the air quality around an eastern North Carolina wildfire, while forecasters said a wind shift could blow smoke to Raleigh, Durham and Greensboro on Thursday.
WRAL viewers said smoke was creating haze and they could smell smoke in downtown Raleigh, Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Henderson and Franklin County on Thursday morning.
The National Weather Service confirmed their observations.
"Areas of smoke from a large wildfire over coastal North Carolina have spread westward into portions of central North Carolina this morning," the service's Raleigh office said in an advisory.
"County officials report that the smoke is not very dense but that the smell of the smoke is very strong. The very young, the elderly and people with respiratory difficulties should remain indoors as much as possible through mid-morning, when the smoke is expected to thin out."
Smoke reduced visibility on roads around Goldsboro, Nashville, Rocky Mount, Smithfield and Wilson to less than 2 miles, according to the weather service.
Forecasters said lighter winds will allow conditions to worsen overnight, and the smoky air could persist for days.
Air quality from Raleigh to Winston-Salem could be affected by smoke carried by winds blowing to the southwest, Bill Swartley, a spokesman for the State Forest Division, said in a statement.
Field observers said the fire had burned about 39,779 acres, or about 62 square miles, and was about 40 percent contained, Swartley said. The figure was a revision of an earlier, slightly larger estimate Wednesday.
The North Carolina Division of Air Quality sent an assessment team to the area to check air quality.
The agency issued a health notice for Thursday for areas west of the fire, including Fayetteville and Raleigh, due to fine particle pollution from the fire. The Code Orange warning means air quality is likely to be unhealthy for sensitive groups.
Authorities have ordered the evacuation of 50 homes in Hyde County since the fire began with a lightning strike June 1 in the Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, about 40 miles from the Atlantic coast.
The evacuated homes were near a wheat field ready for harvesting, fire spokesman Dean McAlister said. He said Hyde County emergency management officials have asked the field's owner to harvest the wheat, plow under the stalks and burn any remaining debris to lessen the fire danger.
"The size of it is amazing," wheat farmer Martin Gelderman said. "We're getting (the wheat) off in case there's any danger."
Rain fell on the fire Tuesday but was not enough to help for more than 24 hours. It has cost more than $1.7 million to fight the fire, not including assistance from local and federal agencies.
Nearly 450 fire personnel, including crews from Harnett County, were working the containment lines. A Wake County Emergency Medical Services team was helping local dispatchers handle fire-related 911 calls.
Separately, a fire in the Virginia portion of the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge was creeping toward North Carolina.
Refuge manager Chris Lowie told The Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk, Va., that a contractor's timbering equipment caught fire Monday afternoon. The fire began at about 30 acres and had grown to about 500 acres." |
6/12/2008 1:50:07 PM |
JTMONEYNCSU All American 24529 Posts user info edit post |
we are all doomed RALEIGH PWNT, STAY HOME 6/12/2008 1:51:23 PM |
ReceiveDeath INEED2 GET HIRITENOW 70283 Posts user info edit post |
6/12/2008 1:52:32 PM |