I was hoping you meant you've seen houses saved from wildfires by using garden hoses? Not that wildfires were put out by garden hoses. This would probably have to have been done (somehow by premonition) before the fire actually hit.
In any case, fire departments have special equipment they need to use in high winds, but even then, 70 mph would be a total extreme as was this anomaly.
I'd kind of like to see a vid of someone using a hose to spray the house in 70 mph winds.
It can't be fairly or accurately judged against 'normal wildfires' that don't normally extend into cities.
Note that in the accompanying pic, the unaffected house had solar panels and so wasn't part of the normal grid. This might suggest a smart meter factor in the fires......fed by the high winds. No spraying of water would counter a smart meter explosion/fire in time, IMHO.
sure... I've been scouring for footage I saw from two wildfires, years back, where the INSIDE of houses were in flames and the exterior was not. I'll keep digging for it, because that was the confirming moment on smart meters, for me.
In 1993, I witnessed the Green Meadow fire ignition in Thousand Oaks, while playing golf at Los Robles GC. We provided information that helped lead to the arrest of the arsonist.
I said I've seen houses saved with garden hoses. Are you assuming the wind was blowing directly at the house? Or was it blowing parallel to the house?
btw... Santa Ana winds in Southern Cal blow at 60+ miles per hour
I was hoping you meant you've seen houses saved from wildfires by using garden hoses? Not that wildfires were put out by garden hoses. This would probably have to have been done (somehow by premonition) before the fire actually hit.
In any case, fire departments have special equipment they need to use in high winds, but even then, 70 mph would be a total extreme as was this anomaly.
I'd kind of like to see a vid of someone using a hose to spray the house in 70 mph winds.
It can't be fairly or accurately judged against 'normal wildfires' that don't normally extend into cities.
Note that in the accompanying pic, the unaffected house had solar panels and so wasn't part of the normal grid. This might suggest a smart meter factor in the fires......fed by the high winds. No spraying of water would counter a smart meter explosion/fire in time, IMHO.
that is exactly what I meant
houses saved with hoses
btw... I'd kinda like to see clear evidence of a DEW weapon exploding houses and cars into flames
funny how nothing like that exists
I think we actually agree on the cause as smart meters. Wind as fuel/cover. The rest is devil in the details. Carry on fren.
sure... I've been scouring for footage I saw from two wildfires, years back, where the INSIDE of houses were in flames and the exterior was not. I'll keep digging for it, because that was the confirming moment on smart meters, for me.
In 1993, I witnessed the Green Meadow fire ignition in Thousand Oaks, while playing golf at Los Robles GC. We provided information that helped lead to the arrest of the arsonist.
https://www.latimes.com/local/la-xpm-2013-may-04-la-me-05-04-fire-strategy-20130504-story.html