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pyrogeog.bsky.social
Director, UC Merced Fire Resilience Center. Pyrogeographer. I study wildfire in the era of anthropogenic climate change. Former wildland firefighter. Opinions are my own. *she/her* 🔥🔥🔥
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Ed Abbey words to live by: “A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government.” “Anarchism is founded on the observation that since few men are wise enough to rule themselves, even fewer are wise enough to rule others.” “Anarchism is democracy taken seriously.”

Worried about wildfires this year? You should be. Preparedness is the absolutely most effective way to mitigate disasters, and the firing of thousands of employees and hiring freeze means that there is almost no one to prepare. WHEN wildfires start (not if), suppression will be a mess.

"Training is preparation for the known; education is preparation for the unknown." Just remember that we train AI, but we educate humans.

Out today in @globalchangebio.bsky.social is our (brief!) rapid-response piece on the broader context surrounding the January 2025 Southern California wildfires & relevance of wet-to-dry hydroclimate whiplash to fire both locally and globally on a warming Earth. [1/8] onlinelibrary.wiley....

Wanted to reshare the webinar event associated with this white paper release. You can watch the event here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkAP... All of the messages discussed by me and the panelists require greater focus after what we have just experienced.

🔥 Fire peeps... @wildland-zko.bsky.social joined us. Give him a follow.

I am shocked* that the Trillion Trees guy ends up being a problem dude. They won't comment, but anyone with that kind of funding record doesn't get let go without doing something VERY, VERY BAD. *Note: I am not shocked at all

In Sept 2020, in the wake of a record CA fire season, I wrote an opinion piece for @nature.com about the need to focus on the human metrics of fire, not the acres burned. The #LAFires underscore that our obsession with size fails to convey the scope of the impacts. 🧵 www.nature.com/articles/d41....

An important facet of the fire building code discussion is that it only applies to areas that CALFIRE deems high fire hazard; it's not blanket. Many urban homes burned in recent years were't included. For seismic codes, every house in the state must comply no matter how far from a fault line.

The @calfire.bsky.social DINS program is the best post-fire data collection program in the world. I wish every state would adopt this, we would learn so much more. Structure losses (so far) for #PalisadesFire: recovery.lacounty.gov/palisades-fi... For #EatonFire: recovery.lacounty.gov/eaton-fire/

To journalists who contact me last week and I wasn't able to respond...my sincere apologies. I lost my voice the week of the worst wildfire disaster ever in LA (didn't have that on my 2025 bingo card!). Many thanks to those of you asking the questions that help us become more resilient.

Appreciate the opportunity to chat w/ @nytimes.com about how we can build smarter (and to code!!) after these wildfires. Suspending wildfire building codes only kicks the can down the road and invites another disaster. Hardened homes and defensible space for the win. www.nytimes.com/interactive/...

Appreciate @marketplace.org having me on to talk about how we can live with wildfires. www.marketplace.org/shows/make-m...

People die in car crashes. A lot of people. In 2022 in the US, about 46,000. But if we had not made the safety improvements in cars that we have over the past half century - and had the same death rate as a result, 153,000 people would have died.

For the thousands of people asking "How do we fix this #wildfire problem?", @michaelwara.bsky.social wrote an excellent white paper 3 years ago that neatly lays out the basics of the multipronged approach. It still holds. @stanfordwoods.bsky.social hosted a discussion panel as well.

Globally, we published a summary paper in 2022 that looks at fire and climate change globally, led by Matt Jones at UEA. agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....

After a wildfire is contained, smoke can linger in homes for months. Learn ways you can protect yourself after wildfires — from @cugeography.bsky.social's Colleen Reid ⬇️

Many questions about whether people can/should live in Malibu. For answers, look at Pepperdine Univ. They safely sheltered-in-place just last month (Franklin Fire) and in 2018 (Woolsey Fire) thanks to excellent planning and fuel management. A model for getting it right. la.curbed.com/2018/11/20/1...

I often use Watch Duty as an example of truly needed tech solutions for wildfire. Drones and AI are never going to prevent wildfires or put them out. But communications before, during, and after fire is a massive gap that tech can absolutely help solve.

Cannot stop thinking about how Octavia Butler wrote a book in 1993 about climate change. It opens with deadly fires in LA in 2025. In the story, a fascist President has just won office with the campaign slogan "Make America Great Again." She was a modern day Nostradamus. If only we'd listened.

Did a little story about the wildfires. gift link (I'm off today but it published today)

As the LA fires burn your feeds will be inundated with wildfire misinformation. Be skeptical of oversimplification. Do not amplify posts that lacks nuance. Info not coming from a rock solid source should not be shared. Our evergreen paper: esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...