Forum Discussion
- JimK-NYExplorer IICount on plenty of fires well past the end of September. That would include some of those currently burning and new ones.
- rhagfoExplorer III
Tom/Barb wrote:
countrykids wrote:
We have a trip planned through Montana, Idaho, Washington, and then down the Oregon coast. We would leave in early September. With the current smoke and fire situation is that still doable?
Hopefully we will have rain by then.
air quality is to improve this week.
the upper level high pressure will drift west as the month progresses.
so says my weather guy.
Well you are about 2.5 weeks from starting, anything could happen between now and then.
Keep your options open, and watch weather and fires. - Tom_BarbExplorer
countrykids wrote:
We have a trip planned through Montana, Idaho, Washington, and then down the Oregon coast. We would leave in early September. With the current smoke and fire situation is that still doable?
Hopefully we will have rain by then.
air quality is to improve this week.
the upper level high pressure will drift west as the month progresses.
so says my weather guy. - Grit_dogNavigatorEarly/mid September could still be a **** shoot.
Be flexible in your plans this year I’d recommend. Hasn’t been a good year in the PNW thus far. - agesilausExplorer IIII will say that the smaoke can travel amazing distances. We left Rock Springs WY a few days ago and the skies have been smoky gray for a week out there. Reportedly from southern Cali fires. Must have been high since you cannot smell it.
US Wind Map - wa8yxmExplorer IIIIs it doable? Most likely
Should you do it?
I would not
There is a government test I took the question was "Where is the best place to take shelter in a hurricane"
Now this also applies to basically ____Disaster of your choice____
And the answers as best I can recall are
Indoors
Outdoors
Underground
***Outside the storm area***
Once I got done laughing I checked the correct (highlighted) answer
(I have said for years the best place to be during a disaster is... Elsewhere, that's why I was lauging)
OH. I passed the test
And two more yesterday - fyrflieExplorer IIIThis link has most of the highway cameras out west that will give you a real time look at where your going.
http://oss.weathershare.org/?clat=40.68317&clng=-103.57183&zoom=5 - Suggest being able to access dot websites. Tripcheck for Oregon, WSDOT.wa.gov for Washington.
Curently there is some restriction in WA. North Cascades WA 20 speed is restricted, heavy smoke and occaisonal short term closures.
Fires are popping up in eastern WA. Air tankers are very busy! None this morning, visibility low here.
Hopefully we will get some rain to slow fires and clear the air. - ktmrfsExplorer IIthe issue isn't just the current smoke conditon, that can change daily. It's what happens with the weather and fires between now and when you leave.
However, I would say you ARE going to encounter smoke during part of your trip, how bad will vary. In general the oregon coast is pretty smoke free even in fire season. Yes, last year was an exception.
Depending on what you want to see and do, the smoke may be a non issue or make it a miserable trip. If you plan on going to places like Crater Lake, when smoke rolls in from fires (almost every year) you may not see much.
Also, if you have health issues such as asma smoke may agrivate it.
All that said, living in western oregon, we are still planning some fall trips and will likely adjust based on weather and fires. And expect campgrounds to have fire restrictions, many may still prohibit fires of any kind, including propane pits and charcoal and only allow propane stove with a shutoff. - ThermoguyExplorer IIThe real question is where do you plan to stop and what routes are you taking.
All the main highways are fine, might be smokey, but driving is not an issue. If you plan to get off the main highway, and have stops in certain places, they might be closed or not fun places to go.
I'm sure you have reservations for your stays, what are those campgrounds saying? It's a little early to decide if it is good or not as fires change daily. New ones starting and current ones getting under control. How much time are you spending on the west side? Most areas west of the mountains are fine as far as fires and smoke, but booked up and crowded. However, no camp fires in all areas, so plan accordingly.
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