The islands always had a "wet" side and a "dry" side naturally, and the dry sides are quite hot and sparsely covered. If you look up "Hawaii drought" as I just did, it's a tangled mess. They have a drought monitoring agency, they have the usual alarmists saying climate change makes it all worse, they seem to have had "droughts" frequently lately, but not clear about how long they last--not years like here in the desert. Interestingly, one article claimed that an El Nino is followed by less rain, and there was a little El Nino this year. Regardless of how short their drought may seem to me, it's sure that so much vegetation can pile up in a short rainy period that when it dries, it will be a big tinder pile. Happens all the time in Oregon and California.
"The islands always had a "wet" side and a "dry" side naturally,...."
This is common with mountainous terrain and is called the "rain-shadow effect. In the United States, Washington, Oregon, California, and other Western States have many examples of rain-shadow. It's where the moist-laden air from the ocean precipitates on the windward side of the mountain and the leeward side is left sheltered and dry.
Surely you jest. Burning a field in a controlled burn is not the same as a fire that is spreading for miles and burning down all the historic homes, businesses, animals, plant life, trees and people. Watch the damn videos and see what is happening there! Sheesh, man.
During press conference they mentioned it sounded like a bomb went off. Hmmm what really happened here?
MORE VIDEOS OF THE FIRES IN HAWAII BELOW:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hG0fFbxYlXk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOxotV1TRjw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4vCER-f4wE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaEKrs7iVWw
How does a lush tropical landscape burn that hot? Has it EVER happened before?
By some of the video, this fire is happening at the same time as Hurricane Dora is passing by with higher-than-normal winds. Suspicious timing.😬🧐
Isn't it though?
" August is typical hot ". They need a big distraction.
The islands always had a "wet" side and a "dry" side naturally, and the dry sides are quite hot and sparsely covered. If you look up "Hawaii drought" as I just did, it's a tangled mess. They have a drought monitoring agency, they have the usual alarmists saying climate change makes it all worse, they seem to have had "droughts" frequently lately, but not clear about how long they last--not years like here in the desert. Interestingly, one article claimed that an El Nino is followed by less rain, and there was a little El Nino this year. Regardless of how short their drought may seem to me, it's sure that so much vegetation can pile up in a short rainy period that when it dries, it will be a big tinder pile. Happens all the time in Oregon and California.
"The islands always had a "wet" side and a "dry" side naturally,...."
This is common with mountainous terrain and is called the "rain-shadow effect. In the United States, Washington, Oregon, California, and other Western States have many examples of rain-shadow. It's where the moist-laden air from the ocean precipitates on the windward side of the mountain and the leeward side is left sheltered and dry.
REMOVED. Do not bring fringe conspiracy BS into this WIN, OP. Consider this a fren-dly warning.
What? Seriously!
Surely you jest. Burning a field in a controlled burn is not the same as a fire that is spreading for miles and burning down all the historic homes, businesses, animals, plant life, trees and people. Watch the damn videos and see what is happening there! Sheesh, man.
"sarcasm",better google it.
Did you respond from the wrong alt account?🫣
As anyone can plainly see it's NOT a real stretch that both are 1 & the same. Genius.