A Dry Winter.
25 January 2014 06:35 pmAfter the Cobblestone Ice Incident of mid-December, and then some rain a couple of weeks later, we've had scarcely a drop of precipitation. To be precise, 0.33" total since 22 December. Result 1: Lots of dead, dry grass about, and often high winds. Result 2: Fire.
Several times in the last couple of weeks I've smelled smoke. It's a mostly nice smell to me; it reminds me of reenactments and fireplace fires (although slightly different), and can be hard to distinguish from a true barbeque. Actually, that's the literal truth. Mesquite and/or hickory are the preferred woods for barbequing. But mesquite grows wild all over Texas. It's notorious for taking over former or hardly-grazed rangeland.
I can be reasonably certain that when I've been smelling it for 7+ hours, in a neighborhood pretty far from any barbeque restaurant, there's a fire burning somewhere.
Several times in the last couple of weeks I've smelled smoke. It's a mostly nice smell to me; it reminds me of reenactments and fireplace fires (although slightly different), and can be hard to distinguish from a true barbeque. Actually, that's the literal truth. Mesquite and/or hickory are the preferred woods for barbequing. But mesquite grows wild all over Texas. It's notorious for taking over former or hardly-grazed rangeland.
I can be reasonably certain that when I've been smelling it for 7+ hours, in a neighborhood pretty far from any barbeque restaurant, there's a fire burning somewhere.
no subject
Date: 2014-01-26 03:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-01-26 08:50 pm (UTC)