Here's how air quality looks nationally as of yesterday. Red triangles are fire locations and colored dots are air quality readings, the worst of which is "Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups". Smoke plumes are shaded gray.
The Great Lakes and Northeast is being impacted by smoke from fires in Manitoba & Ontario, while Alaskan smoke is what we're watching closer to home.
Here's what the fire danger assessment for north America is today. The bigger fires are mostly in Canada & Alaska thanks to very dry & hot conditions to our north.
What does this all mean for the rest of our summer? Are all those doom & gloom predictions of the "new normal" and smoke monsters laid to rest?
- Haha, I wish! Too early to tell.
- All it takes is two weeks of hot & dry conditions for the fire risk to ramp up significantly.
- Even if (2) doesn't materialize, smoke transport from fires elsewhere can cause lots of air quality woes.
- And we won't know about (3) until a few days before the event, because longer range models aren't terribly accurate with those finer details.
Thank you. Loving this cloudier and cooler summer so far, but I noticed the overcast skies have kept night temps warmer. So while our daytimes highs are lower, the average temperatures for the month might be warmer then we expect. Lets hope wildfires and smoke are kept away this summer.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the great work!
Thanks for this information! Have used your blog and site info a lot the last few summers and its fun to actually take a look when we have excellent air quality. I appreciate your humor about the rest of the summer.
ReplyDeleteHi, do you have a URL you could share for the second map "North America Fire Danger"? Would be cool to be able to bookmark and check back. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThe fire danger product is here: https://www.wfas.net/
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