Dude in the video who is a expert on trees stated some of those trees can be set aflame with just a lighter on a single green leaf. So excuse me if I take his creditable words about trees over your amateur nay saying.
Glass melts at 2552°F the average temperature of a wild fire is around 1500°F with the extreme end being around 2200°F, even the extreme end is not hot enough to melt glass.
Considering fire Marshalls and inspectors are saying it's a weird burn ill choose to believe in their years of experience over your amateur observations.
I grew up in So. Cal. 30 miles east of LA. And lived at the foothills of the San Bernardino mountains. We had tumbleweeds and lots of dry bush on the hills north of us every summer. I remember helping my Dad water down the roof; no cities destroyed. They actually practiced fire management well back then. I also would jump of a ladder with an umbrella during the Santa Ana winds. We've had them all my life. But weird, even the other day the high winds weren't from the coast as usual. These aren't brush fires. I'm confidant of that. Research great fires in history; the stories don't make sense. It's how they destroy "to rebuild".
Dude in the video who is a expert on trees stated some of those trees can be set aflame with just a lighter on a single green leaf. So excuse me if I take his creditable words about trees over your amateur nay saying.
Glass melts at 2552°F the average temperature of a wild fire is around 1500°F with the extreme end being around 2200°F, even the extreme end is not hot enough to melt glass.
Considering fire Marshalls and inspectors are saying it's a weird burn ill choose to believe in their years of experience over your amateur observations.
I grew up in So. Cal. 30 miles east of LA. And lived at the foothills of the San Bernardino mountains. We had tumbleweeds and lots of dry bush on the hills north of us every summer. I remember helping my Dad water down the roof; no cities destroyed. They actually practiced fire management well back then. I also would jump of a ladder with an umbrella during the Santa Ana winds. We've had them all my life. But weird, even the other day the high winds weren't from the coast as usual. These aren't brush fires. I'm confidant of that. Research great fires in history; the stories don't make sense. It's how they destroy "to rebuild".