05 November 2009

2009 Fire season.

The 2009 fire season is now officially done and dusted. On behalf of myself and all my crew, I would like to thank each and all of our members for the excellent support during the season. If it was not for your awareness efforts, we could have had another bad year. Weather conditions were no different to previous years, but we were all far better prepared than in the past.

 

The Elnino forecast does not look good towards the latter part of our rainfall season, so I urge everyone to be carefull.

 

May you all have a wonderful Christmas and a prosperous New Year.

 

Regards the Firestop team.

 

 

31 July 2009

Prohibition on the burning of fire breaks.

This is a reminder to everyone out there, that today is the last day of fire break burning. As of Monday, any smoke that is detected should be reported to the nearest authorities as soon as possible.

10 July 2009

Weather Links

Fire Weather
Fire Weather (World)

Please click here to view KZN FDIs

General Weather

Saws Home Page - South African Weather Services - Register at SAWS for all short, medium and long term forecasts

National Forecasts - iAfrica
Detailed weather forecast - PMB

Detailed weather forecast - Mthatha

Detailed weather forecast - Elliot

Detailed weather forecast - Richards Bay

Detailed weather forecast - Ulundi

Weather forecast for Howick in KwaZulu-Natal on YR.NO

WIND GURU (Username firestop Password simon)

Richards Bay Refrigeration - many thanks to Richards Bay Refrigeration!

Kobus Botha's weather website - many thanks Kobus for an excellent weather site

Current Fires - fire detection via satellite - courtesy of Eskom

BBC weather forecasts

Current weather - Kwambonambi

Current weather - Howick

Current weather - Richmond KZN

Freemeteo

Accuweather

Weather Underground


Weather charts, satellite images and radar
Synoptic Chart - SAWS

Synoptic Chart Fire Weather - Netfor
Significant Weather Medium Level
Significant Weather high Level
Near real time Sat Images from MODIS (NASA)
Satellite Images - SAWS

Satellite Images - CSAG

South African Radar Images

Durban Radar

Satellite & Radar overlay
Thunderstorm probability chart

CSAG forecasts University of Cape Town
10-Day Precipitation Outlook for Africa Ten day Precipitation Outlook for Africa
10-Day Temperature Outlook for Africa Ten day Temperature Outlook for Africa
Storm Track Tropical Storm Tracking


El-Nino

El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) (Climate Prediction centre)
Fact Sheet on El-NiƱo
Information on El Nino

22 June 2009

Fire report form.

Please take note we have added the Fire Report form under the “Downloads” tag on our website.

25 May 2009

Link to updated FDI.

You will have noticed that the link to the FDI on our website still indicates last year’s  information. I am busy working with SAWS to correct this as they have changed their website.

 

In the mean time, you can do the following:

 

Open the SAWS homepage on our site.

In the bottom left hand corner is a “Products” tab. Open that. You do not have to log in to do this.

On the next screen is the “Specialized forecast tab”. Open that.

On the next screen you will see a tab for the “Fire danger forecast”.

Once that is opened you will have access to all the forecasts.

 

Corrected 2009 burning prohibitions.

We have just received the corrected burning prohibitions for 2009 and these are now available on our site to download. Once again, should you require assistance with the interpretation of the regulations, please contact us.

08 May 2009

Printing error on 2009 burning prohibitions.

Please note that the Government printers have made a printing error in the 2009 burning prohibitions. The prohibition on the burning of ground cover in the Ixopo area should read 09-06-01 to 09-10-31 and not 09-06-01 to 09-06-31 as it is currently shown. The matter will be rectified and a new set of prohibitions printed.

07 May 2009

Burning Prohibitions 2009.

The 2009 burning prohibitions are now available on our website. To access please follow the link on our Home page. Should you require assistance with the interpretation of the regulations, please contact us.

25 March 2009

Keith retires.

The staff of KZNFPA would like to wish Keith Paterson, our ex-chairman (2005 – 2006) an adventure full, sun soaked retirement. Keith, thank you for the years you spent with us as committee member, vice chairman and chairman. Your influence will be felt and your presence will be missed for many years to come

2009 Fire season.

It is encouraging to see that our members are submitting their 2009 updated information so quickly. This will enable us to keep our records up to date and provide the necessary support when required.

When you are in the area, please come and visit us. This way we can get to put a “ Face to the voice “ and hopefully assist you with any queries you might have.

We are in radio contact all year round now, so at any time please check your radio communication with us.

20 March 2009

Arsonist sentenced to death.

Riverside County jury orders death for arsonist

 

Rodrigo Pena / Press Enterprise

Raymond Lee Oyler, 38, is led from the Riverside County courtroom Wednesday after the jury’s verdict was given.

Raymond Lee Oyler, 38, had been convicted of killing five firefighters in the 2006 Esperanza blaze.

By David Kelly
March 19, 2009

Reporting from Riverside -- After barely a day of deliberation, a Riverside County jury on Wednesday returned a verdict of death for Raymond Lee Oyler for starting the 2006 Esperanza fire in the foothills of the San Jacinto Mountains that killed five firefighters, destroyed 34 homes and charred more than 41,000 acres.

Firefighters and the families of the victims hailed the decision and said it offered a measure of justice for a crime they said had torn a hole in the fabric of their lives.

 

"For the last 2 1/2 years, life has been unbearable," said Gloria Ayala, the mother of Daniel Hoover-Najera, one of the firefighters killed in the blaze. "Danny is no longer down the hallway, no longer a conversation away. This loss is almost too much, but now justice will be served."

She also had a message for Oyler.

"I harbor no anger, only hope that you understand the depth of pain you caused us and your family," Ayala said, as she stood with the families of other victims outside the courthouse. "More importantly, I forgive you for the act that took my son's life."

Judge W. Charles Morgan will sentence Oyler to death or life in prison without parole at a hearing June 5.

Oyler, 38, was convicted March 6 of five counts of first-degree murder, 20 counts of arson and 17 counts of using an incendiary device. Prosecutors said the Beaumont mechanic had set fires throughout the San Gorgonio Pass in the summer of 2006 leading up to the Esperanza fire on Oct. 26.

Early that morning, he used a combination of matches and a cigarette to light a fire in a remote area of Cabazon. Gusty Santa Ana winds drove the flames into the San Jacinto Mountains, where they reached speeds of 40 mph and temperatures of 1,500 degrees.

A U.S. Forest Service firefighting crew based in Idyllwild was overrun by flames while trying to save a house. In addition to Hoover-Najera, 20, the victims were Pablo Cerda, 23; Mark Loutzenhiser, 43; Jason McKay, 27; and Jess McLean, 27.

The trial lasted more than a month, during which jurors were shown gruesome photos of the dead, some of whom suffered burns to more than 90% of their bodies. But even after seeing and hearing the evidence, and even after convicting Oyler of first-degree murder, the jury was hesitant to sentence him to death.

"I tell you there were more tears today than in any part of the trial," said the jury foreman, who declined to give his name. "People kept asking, 'What if? What if?' But when we looked at those pictures of the firemen again, that convinced us."

The foreman said hearing witness Maria Loutzenhiser, wife of Mark Loutzenhiser, talk about the ordeal and life after her husband's death was the most emotional part of the trial.

"Everyone just lost it," he said, tearing up.

The juror said the panel initially had a hard time determining whether Oyler was guilty of setting the Esperanza fire until they began tying all the smaller blazes together. He said a series of lies told by Oyler about his whereabouts the night of the fire also swayed them.

"When you follow it all to the end, there was no other conclusion," he said.

Heather Oyler, the convicted murderer's 21-year-old daughter, had hoped for mercy. Her father, she said, was a "very nice man."

"I just want you to know my dad is not the monster they have painted him as," she said, surrounded by distraught family members. "I understand that my dad may have had problems, but he did not intend to kill anyone."

She vowed to visit him in San Quentin every month and help with his appeal.

Bonnie McKay, mother of Jason McKay, said trial testimony showed that some members of the Oyler family knew he was setting fires.

"If a family member had come forward from the get-go, we wouldn't be standing here today and they wouldn't have lost their loved one," she said.

Riverside County Fire Chief John Hawkins pronounced Oyler's "reign of terror" over.

The man who prosecuted the case, Riverside County Deputy Dist. Atty. Michael Hestrin, thanked the jury for reliving the horror of the fire.

"The men of Engine 57 truly were the best of us," he said. "When everyone else was running away from the fire, they were running toward it."

Oyler's defense attorneys were not available for comment. During closing arguments in the death penalty phase Tuesday, attorney Thomas Eckhardt admitted that his client was a serial arsonist and a murderer. But killing him, he said, would not bring back the dead, and life in prison without parole was a fitting punishment.

Perhaps the most vehement reaction to the death verdict came from the chairman of the Riverside County Board of Supervisors, Jeff Stone, who spoke outside the courthouse alongside the victims' families.

"It shall in no way compare to the eternal punishment that will be suffered by Raymond Oyler in hell," he said.

david.kelly@latimes.com

 

 

19 March 2009

Weather.

My nephew phoned today to say that they have had their first frost of the year in Middleburg in the Eastern Cape. I do believe we will have an early frost in KZN as well. In a way this might be good as it will allow land owners to start burning their fire breaks early and hopefully be completed before the prohibition period starts. Fuel levels are high after the good rains and I urge all to be cautious in the months ahead. It is encouraging to see that FPA’s have started their awareness days. Keep up the good work guys and let me know if we can assist in any way.

At this stage we are still planning to have our aircraft fully online by the 1st July. Conditions will dictate this.

18 March 2009

Cigarette Butts

Despite the conflicting stories, it is a proven fact that burning cigarette butts discarded by careless smokers can cause veld fires. The danger lies in believing that all unexplained veld fires are caused by smokers. This is both unfair and irresponsible. This article has been published to provide information to the public, and not to accuse or protect any specific group.

Fires caused by cigarettes can be placed into 2 categories. The first is where a person uses a burning cigarette with the specific intention of causing malicious damage. The second is where a carelessly discarded burning cigarette butt starts a vegetation fire that may cause either little or extensive damage to both the environment and possibly houses or other structures.

For a cigarette butt to start a veld (vegetation) fire, a number of conditions need to be present. Without going into specifics, these criteria include:

1. Length of the cigarette remaining : If the cigarette has been smoked right down to the filter there will be very little combustible material remaining to start the fire

2. Wind strength : A suitable wind needs to be blowing that is neither too weak or too strong

3. Orientation of the cigarette butt to the wind : The cigarette needs to fall so that receives the optimum wind.

4. Angle of the cigarette : If the cigarette lands angled up there is very little chance of it starting a fire.

5. The type of vegetation it has landed in : There is more chance of a fire starting in old dry grass than in young moist shrubs.

6. The temperature : The higher the temperature, the more chance of a fire.

7. The Relative Humidity (the amount of moisture in the air) : This along with the plant moisture (see next item) plays an important part as to whether a plant will catch alight.

8. The amount of moisture in the vegetation : The more moisture present (such as in green plants), the more difficult it is to catch alight when compared to old dry grass.

12 March 2009

New web page.

Welcome to the new Firestop web site.

 

Simon Thomas

Operations Manager

KZN Umbrella Fire Protection Association

 

Tel (+27) 33 330 8421.

Fax (+27) 33 330 8424.

Cell (+27) 82 654 4943.

 

simon@firestop.co.za

www.firestop.co.za