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Wildfires across the Canadian Prairie Provinces

Margery

When Stuff Gets Crazy LOOK UP! Maranatha!
Staff member
We're starting to smell the smoke here.


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Manitoba declares provincewide state of emergency over wildfires​


Manitoba has declared a provincewide state of emergency as wildfires continue to threaten communities across the province.
An emergency alert issued at around 5:25 p.m. CT Wednesday said the measure was due to rapidly spreading wildfires and extreme fire conditions in northern and eastern Manitoba.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said the "significant step" will involve the evacuation of about 17,000 people as fires continued to intensify throughout Wednesday.
"This is the largest evacuation Manitoba will have seen in most people's living memory," he said during a Wednesday evening news conference.

Flin Flon evacuation​

The wildfire threatening Flin Flon, a city of roughly 5,000 that's about 630 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, started earlier this week at a landfill in Creighton, Sask., just across the provincial border, and spread into Manitoba. Kinew said he's in talks with Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe to ensure people on both sides of the border are taken care of amid health-care disruptions caused by the fire.

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Canada's been violating the No Smoking Within 25 Feet of Building signs here :eye roll:

Yesterday and the day before were terrible. Brownish-gray smoke and smelled like burning phenols. AQI red
We would have been in big trouble without the thunderstorms and rain

Today is much better, probably because of the wind shifting.
 
It's worse than when just our province was burning up over the past few years. This stretches across northern and middle Alberta, straight across with Saskatchewan and Manitoba being worst affected. We have a bit in the north eastern section of BC.

The smoke is intense. It's so bad that it's being carried on the air currents into the US.

I'm not getting it here in BC as the jet stream blows it eastward and a bit south. Right now we have some cooler damp weather interspersed with sunny days, but our fire risk is doing ok where I live.

Here is a map, hopefully it will show up ok: CIFFC

HA are hectares. There is 2.471 acres to a hectare. The big dots are over 1,000 Hectares which mean they are bigger than 2471 acres in size which is a lot of forest that is burning, creating all that smoke.
 
It's worse than when just our province was burning up over the past few years. This stretches across northern and middle Alberta, straight across with Saskatchewan and Manitoba being worst affected. We have a bit in the north eastern section of BC.

The smoke is intense. It's so bad that it's being carried on the air currents into the US.

I'm not getting it here in BC as the jet stream blows it eastward and a bit south. Right now we have some cooler damp weather interspersed with sunny days, but our fire risk is doing ok where I live.

Here is a map, hopefully it will show up ok: CIFFC

HA are hectares. There is 2.471 acres to a hectare. The big dots are over 1,000 Hectares which mean they are bigger than 2471 acres in size which is a lot of forest that is burning, creating all that smoke.

Uh, oh, they haven't updated the Province names :lol:
 
Given the horribleness of the air here right now, and the Moderate AQI indication on the map for here, I wonder if TPTB are downplaying/hiding how bad it really is. WeatherUnderground indicates AQI 58 for here, but that seems a lot better than it really is.


Maps show U.S. air quality and Canada wildfire smoke forecast​

By Updated on: June 5, 2025 / 3:37 PM EDT / CBS News

"An air quality map shows conditions across the United States on Thursday as Canadian wildfire smoke is forecast to continue to impact parts of the country, prompting air quality alerts and advisories in multiple states.
The map shows parts of Illinois, Indiana and Michigan were facing unhealthy air as of Thursday afternoon, according to a federal measurement system called the Air Quality Index. Minnesota and Wisconsin had experienced unhealthy air Wednesday and the days prior.
The air index has six ratings:
  • Good
  • Moderate
  • Unhealthy for sensitive groups
  • Unhealthy
  • Very unhealthy
  • Hazardous
Sensitive groups include those who have a heart or lung disease, as well as older adults, children and pregnant women.

Current air quality
This map shows the current air quality across the U.S., based on ozone and PM2.5 levels. Click here to understand what the Air Quality Index (AQI) ratings mean."

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:pray: :pray: :amen: :amen: :thankyou: :thankyou:
 
I really wish they'd take into account the twice-a-day temperature inversions that happen here. The inversion holds smoke close to the ground where people and pets have to breathe it, walk in it, etc. :headbang:

Forecasting smoke can be "like looking for a needle in a haystack," say meteorologists​

By Adam Del Rosso
June 4, 2025 / 5:50 PM CDT / CBS Minnesota

Wednesday's air quality made being outside a lot better across the region after the recent smoky stretch. Skies were much more clear, and healthy, compared to Tuesday.
For days, wildfire smoke has filled the skies over the Twin Cities, and the entire state. But tracking how that smoke will move from Canada, or when it's going to cause problems at the surface, isn't easy.
"You're looking for really kind of small, fine details that end up becoming a big deal. It's akin to severe weather forecasting. You're always kind of looking for a needle in a haystack, and oftentimes those are the things that will make or break your forecast," said Matt Taraldsen, a meteorologist with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
He said there are several forecasting models that his team uses, but even the models struggle on such a small scale.
"We're always kind of hunting for those mechanisms, like a cold front or a thunderstorm outflow boundary, that will push that smoke down to the ground and hold it there. And the models just, you know, beyond 12 or 24 hours, really have a hard time with any of those types of details."
But it's more than just the predictions that are complex. It's the chemisty too. Tuesday is the perfect example since rain typically helps to clean the air. Not this time since they were only light showers."

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