The flying was active in the morning, but a combination of wind and monitoring the slurry perimeter laid down earlier kept the planes on the ground. The forecast for tonight notes possible gusts in the 40 to 60 mph range so these tankers will likely be going hot and heavy in the morning if the fire jumps the slurry lines.
Even though many homes have been lost (over 160 to date), these pilots have no doubt prevented hundreds of others from catching fire. Seeing the devastation from the air only steels their resolve to contain this fire so the ground troops can kill it....these guys are rock stars.

Command / control planes

From today



Nice engine grime – this baby works for a living!

The ‘Office’


Loved the Jolly Roger in the nose of Tanker # 10

Each of the Neptunes have a different spinner pattern – checkers on # 10 and swirls on # 45

These jet engines really help the planes get off the ground in hot weather – and the mile-high elevation of the airport doesn’t help.


The P-3’s take on a glowing orange color in sunlight


And this bird seemed as lost in Colorado as a seagull.

Here’s hoping that the winds don’t kick the fire back up over night.
BUFFIE