We continue to have little rain and the vegetation is drier than usual, so the potential for more fires is increased.
Daniel McCarthy
[Ramos and a dozen other campers spent the morning Aug. 27 harvesting pine cones with the help of employees of the U.S. Forest Service. Following them on their journey to the past was a documentary film crew from KVCR, a PBS station in San Bernardino. Daniel McCarthy, archaeologist with the U.S. Forest Service, was one of the invited guests who got to experience the harvest.] There were an awful lot of people who had never participated in that kind of cultural event before,.. It was rewarding to go along and share with that.
people past experience journey kind morning share film forest
[When the group returned to camp, the harvesters had bags full of green cones and branches, and sticky fingers from the inevitable sap that comes with the task.] The second part of the process is to extract the pine nuts out of the green cones,.. They have to be heat treated to extract the pine nuts.
process green part nuts heat
potential rain
Cooler temperatures helped keep the fire down low overnight and kept it from spreading. Crews will continue to put fire lines down today to get the fires under control.
control today fire
But we're comparing tornado reports, which are probably inflated, with confirmed tornadoes for previous years.
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