Huell Howser – Choosing to See the Joy

The Light of California

There was no mistaking who he was that morning of June 13, 2005, when I turned my car into the Sweetwater River overlook parking lot off Interstate 8 in the wilds of eastern San Diego County.

He had on his signature, California-style tropical shirt and sunglasses along with that classic smile that lit up the entire landscape. He grabbed my hand with his US Marine grip, looked me in the eyes, and greeted me with his unforgettable Tennessee welcome. “Good mornin’!”

Huell Howser.

And so began the filming of the chaparral episode for his popular public television show, California’s Green. I’d been bugging him to do it for months.

Huell exemplified the joy of living, the magic of life, and the beauty of California in ways that will never be matched. His optimism and honest curiosity brought out the best in people, no matter who they were. His one and only music video with his friends at the Musicians Institute in Los Angeles is a testament to the infectious joy he offered so freely.

During the chaparral shoot, we visited four different locations: the Sweetwater River overlook, a stunning red shanks chaparral stand near the Sunrise Highway, a chaparral stand on the outskirts of Pine Valley, old-growth chaparral on Guatay Mountain, and chaparral recovering from the 2003 Cedar Fire in Cuyamaca Rancho State Park.

Each time Huell would tell Cameron his camera man to roll it, he knew exactly what he wanted to ask, constructing the entire shot in-process. Within a few minutes, Huell would declare, “That’s enough,” and we’d move on to the next location. We never re-shot a scene. When each clip is perfect, there’s no need to complicate the process with more film to edit.

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The Big Melt is Coming! Hell Fire Inevitable!

Embracing Wisdom Over Gossip

The drum beat of doom has been pounding out the same headline in the Los Angeles Times for a month now: Beware the Big Melt! The dire warning appeared April 3, April 5, April 11, April 25, April 26, May 3. And again this morning (May 8). Same sensationalism, same embellishment, same catastrophizing.

BIG MELT ‘JUST GETTING STARTED’
Much of the massive Sierra Nevada snowpack remains,
keeping flood risk high as temperatures rise

And for an additional dose of panic, the bottom of the May 3 column offered this…

FIRE SEASON IS COMING
The wet winter will only delay the inevitable, officials say, as fuels across the
state begin to dry out and become susceptible to ignition.

“Don’t let the rain and the snow fool you,” the expert said. And all that green Nature? It’s just fuel. Armageddon is coming; walls of water and fires from hell.

We shall see.

Meanwhile, glancing at the rest of the paper revealed more slamming of adjectives against nouns to trigger reader fear: danger in LA streets, a disunited kingdom, three stabbings spark fears, etc., etc.

And next year if the drought returns? A new series:

BIG DRY ‘HAS MORE TO COME’
Tiny Snowpack Threatens Water Supply
and…
Fire Danger Increases as Drought Dries Fuels.

Chart: The Snowpack. We’ve been here before, and somehow survived. As with annual rainfall and wildfire in California, the annual snowpack has one pattern – wildly unpredictable with severe swings in either direction, a historical fact the news-gossip media would like you to forget. See date-referenced photos below.

We’ve had prior contact with the Big Melt journalist a couple years ago. She thought she’d found her gotcha headline after the 2021 Alisal Fire in Santa Barbara County – Fuel Break Stopped by Environmentalists Could Have Helped. When we explained the fire likely started in the weeds along the road where the fire break had been planned, then proceeded downhill away from the road and toward the coast, the tone of the conversation changed. As we tried to explain this could be an excellent opportunity to expose how useless backcountry habitat clearance projects really are, the discussion ended. No conflict, no story. No headline.

But terrifying readers about melting snow, and thriving, green habitat? Now that’s the ticket!

The LA Times used to be better. They should be taking some lessons from the New York Times and study their take on the so-called Big Melt: California Snow is Melting, and It’s a Beautiful Thing.

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The Beginnings of the Fire Suppression Fallacy

– How Truth Metastasized Into A Lie – The Fire Suppression Fallacy –
(Part IV)

How did the observation that fire suppression may have caused some forests to miss several natural fires due to firefighting metastasize into a pernicious stereotype that has convinced huge numbers of people that Nature is sick, clogged with dead trees and unhealthy vegetation, and is ready to vaporize in the next wildfire?

As is the case with fear-mongering media outlets, catastrophizing even the most insignificant events to obtain attention, images and situations are cherry-picked by proponents of the fire suppression fallacy to communicate the most dire circumstance. The propaganda has been incredibly successful, convincing politicians to allocate billions of dollars to “fix” Nature with grinding machines, chainsaws, and herbicide.

As with most stories designed to panic, the truth becomes embellished and inconvenient facts are ignored or forgotten.

Cherry picked image of a dense forest to justify logging.

Photo: A selected scene to convey the most dire circumstance; was it cherry-picked or a fair representation? This image was shown at a recent conservation conference in San Diego County to support the notion that the forests in the region’s eastern mountains are sick, “dog-haired” thickets in need of immediate treatment. Looking carefully through the trees in the foreground, green trees can be seen. Also, notice how the tops of the trees in the foreground are not shown in the frame. Some, perhaps even most of these trees are not dead. In denser pockets like this it is common for trees to self-prune their lower and middle branches, especially during droughts, since those branches receive far less sunlight and on a per-needle basis, needles in the lower and middle canopy are significantly less photosynthetically productive. Look closely at the upper right. Green foliage can be seen atop one of the mature trees in the foreground that is ostensibly dead. If the image had been expanded slightly to include the tree tops, would green crowns appear on some or most of the trees? Regardless, drought has killed groups of trees in forests for millions of years. It is a natural event that a multitude of organisms take advantage of, from nest cavity birds, to insects, to fungi. Unfortunately, the actual location shown in the image was not identified, although the presence of what appear to be invasive weeds indicate this may have been a previously disturbed site.

Photos: More typical forest scenes in the mountains of eastern San Diego County. L) An image selected to represent the average forest composition. R) A mixed conifer/oak/chaparral community with an open meadow/ranch land in the background. Location: Laguna Mountains, Cleveland National Forest.


The origins of the fire suppression fallacy can be traced back to the late 1800’s when westward expansion brought more human beings, and hence sources of ignition, into a highly flammable environment. Vast piles of logging slash (limbs and other waste from timber operations), hot cinders from trains traveling deep into the back country, unattended fires utilized to clear land, outright carelessness (Pyne 1982), and most importantly drought and high winds, all played a role in adding more, larger fires to the landscape. Between 1865 and 1910 large wildfires from the Great Lakes region to California led federal and state governments to form cooperative firefighting agreements and pass regulations attempting to reduce the likelihood of human caused ignitions and fight fires when they started.

Many of these fires, such as the 1871 Peshtigo fire in Wisconsin, which killed an estimated 1,500 people, were linked to piles of logging slash. Such slash-related forest fires continued into the early 1900’s, due to the deadly combination of loggers resisting change in their practices (McMahon and Karamanski 2002) and severe fire weather. As a reminder, these huge, high-intensity wildfires burned prior to the era of fire suppression (Table 1).

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