Daily News for July 26, 2024

Today’s Takeaway

Hampton Lumber announces temporary mill curtailment in Fort St. James, BC

The Tree Frog Forestry News
July 26, 2024
Category: Today's Takeaway

Citing low log availability, Hampton Lumber announced a five week mill curtailment in Fort St. James, BC. In related news: Terrace Bay, Ontario pulp mill workers want action on shuttered mill; Canfor and Weyerhaeuser report Q2, 2024 results; and Raymond James’ Daryl Swetlishoff opines about their earnings (in video). Meanwhile: Michigan eases the path for mass timber schools; and the lastest newsletters from the Softwood Lumber Board, and BC Forest Enhancement Society.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: Alberta’s premier says up to half of all Jasper buildings have been destroyed by fire; the fire in Golden, BC fire spurs evacuations; Canada’s wildfires are captured in satellite imagery; the Pacific Northwest fires send smoke southeastward; Nick Smith says Montana’s Horse Gulch fire could have been prevented; New Hampshire debates logging in the  White Mountain National Forest; and Australia keeps the Pine Wood Nematode at bay.

Finally, an early look at the rebuild of Notre-Dame’s wooden roof, 5-years after fire.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog Editor

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Business & Politics

Hampton Lumber announces temporary mill curtailment in Fort St. James

By Binny Paul
The Northern View
July 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT ST. JAMES, BC — Hampton Lumber announced on July 24 that the Fort St. James mill will undergo a temporary curtailment for five weeks due to low log availability. The forestry company said the decision is unrelated to market conditions but was necessary to address current supply challenges. However, operations such as the log yard, kilns, planer, and shipping will proceed without interruption during this period. The company said it remains dedicated to its Northern Operations and values the strong relationships it has with local First Nations and communities. …”We encourage our employees and community members to continue advocating for the forestry industry, which is vital to our communities and economy,” the post read. Hampton Lumber purchased the sawmill from Conifex in 2019… demolished it and opened the new one during the pandemic in 2022.

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Terrace Bay Pulp Mill Workers Frustrated With Ontario Premier Ford

By Sandy Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
July 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — A call for an “urgent” meeting with Ontario Premier Doug Ford by the United Steelworkers (USW) union in Ontario earlier this month has gone unanswered leaving 400 displaced AV Terrace Bay Pulp Mill workers frustrated and in the dark. The pulp mill, which is considered the economic engine of Terrace Bay and nearby communities, is owned by the India-based Aditya Birla conglomerate and was indefinitely idled in early January. The employees and township were left wondering what comes next. Myles Sullivan, USW District 6 Director for Ontario and Atlantic Canada, said Aditya Birla won’t tell them if the mill is for sale, if the closure is temporary or permanent, or if and when they are going to reopen it. “If anybody can push (Aditya Birla) to give real answers to us that would be a key first step and the Ford government,” he said.

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Finance & Economics

Daryl Swetlishoff at Raymond James discusses earnings at Canfor and West Fraser

BNN Bloomberg
July 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

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Canfor reports operating loss of $251 million in Q2, 2024

Canfor Corporation
July 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

VANCOUVER, BC — Canfor Corporation reported its Q2, 2024 results. The Company reported an operating loss of $250.8 million compared to an operating loss of $85.8 million in the first quarter of 2024. After accounting for adjusting items totaling $83.0 million, the Company’s operating loss was $167.8 million and when taking into consideration $38.5 million in restructuring costs recognized this period, correlated with the permanent and indefinite curtailments in the lumber and pulp businesses, the Company’s operating loss for the second quarter was $129.3 million. For the lumber segment, the operating loss was $230.5 million for the second quarter of 2024, compared to the previous quarter’s operating loss of $57.1 million. …For the pulp and paper segment, the operating loss was $5.6 million compared to an operating loss of $15.7 million. Canfor’s CEO, Don Kayne, said, “This quarter posed considerable challenges for our lumber business. While our European operations delivered solid earnings, North America continued to face a persistently weak pricing environment.

Related on Canfor Pulp and Paper: Canfor Pulp reports Q2, 2024 results.

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Housing Share of US GDP Remains Above 16% Despite Marginal Declines in Residential Investment

By Jesse Wade
NAHB – Eye on Housing
July 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Housing’s share of the economy stayed level at 16.1% in the second quarter of 2024. The share remained above 16% after staying constant at 15.9% for all of 2023. The more cyclical home building and remodeling component – residential fixed investment (RFI) – was 4.0% of GDP, level from 4.0% in the first quarter. RFI subtracted 5 basis points from the headline GDP growth rate in the second quarter of 2024, marking the first negative contributions since the second quarter of 2023. In the second quarter, housing services added 18 basis points (bps) to GDP growth while the share remained at 12.1% of GDP. Overall GDP increased at a 2.8% annual rate, up from a 1.4% increase in the first quarter of 2024, and a 3.4% increase in the fourth quarter of 2023. …Housing-related activities contribute to GDP in two basic ways: The first is through residential fixed investment (RFI). The second impact of housing on GDP is the measure of housing services.

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U.S. Economic Growth Accelerated in Second Quarter

By Jing Fu
NAHB – Eye on Housing
July 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

In the second quarter of 2024, the U.S. economy grew twice as fast as it did in the first quarter, supported by consumer spending and private inventory investment. Furthermore, the data from the GDP report suggests that inflation is cooling. The GDP price index rose 2.3% for the second quarter, down from a 3.1% increase in the first quarter of 2024. The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, which measures inflation (or deflation) across various consumer expenses and reflects changes in consumer behavior, rose 2.6% in the second quarter. This is down from a 3.4% increase in the first quarter of 2024. According to the “advance” estimate by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, real gross domestic product (GDP) expanded at a robust 2.8% annual pace in the second quarter of 2024. This is faster than the 1.4% gain in the first quarter of 2024. This quarter’s growth was close to NAHB’s forecast of a 2.7% increase.

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Weyerhaeuser reports positive Q2, 2024 results, aquisition of 84,300 acres of Alabama timberland

Weyerhaeuser Company
July 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

SEATTLE – Weyerhaeuser Company reported second quarter net earnings of $173 million on net sales of $1.9 billion. This compares with net earnings of $230 million on net sales of $2.0 billion for the same period last year and net earnings of $114 million for first quarter 2024. Excluding an after-tax benefit of $19 million for special items, the company reported second quarter net earnings of $154 million. This compares with net earnings before special items of $238 million for the same period last year.Adjusted EBITDA for second quarter 2024 was $410 million, compared with $469 million for the same period last year and $352 million for first quarter 2024. … Weyerhaeuser also announced strategic timberland acquisitions in Alabama, totaling 84,300 acres for $244 million. The first transaction closed in second quarter 2024 for $48 million.Devin W. Stockfish, CEO, said “Despite ongoing challenges in the lumber market, Adjusted EBITDA improved across each of our business segments compared to first quarter 2024.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Softwood Lumber Board Education faculty workshops bring wood design into classrooms | July Newsletter

The Softwood Lumber Board
July 26, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Don’t miss these and other headlines in the July newsletter

  • The SLB recently published its Q1 2024 Report: Generated 431 MM BF of Incremental Demand in Q1 2024
  • WoodWorks Market Trend Analysis: Warehouse & Manufacturing
  • From Forest to Classroom: SLB Education Workshops Transform Faculty Expertise
  • The AWC Launches New Construction Fire Safety App
  • Updated Resource Library Boosts AEC Audience Targeting
  • Top Developers Seeing Mass Timber Buildings Outperform Concrete and Steel
  • Industry Resources

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World’s tallest mass timber building? Milwaukee could take title

By Christina Van Zelst
Fox6Now
July 25, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

A new building proposal could change Milwaukee’s skyline and set a world record. The city announced plans for multiple mixed-use buildings that would replace the Marcus Performing Arts Center parking structure at Water and State. While one building would become the state’s tallest, another would be the world’s tallest mass timber building. The proposed mass timber building would be the third of its kind in Milwaukee. The Ascent on Van Buren was the most recent build. “These are more popular in Europe and other countries,” said North Shore Fire Rescue Chief Robert Whitaker. Whitaker said don’t let the wood fool you; with building code requirements and updated technology, mass timber buildings are fire safe. …The project would potentially the tallest building in the state. Currently, the tallest building in Wisconsin is the US Bank Center, which stands 601 feet tall. The proposed building would stand 613 feet.

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Amended Law Eases Path for Mass Timber Schools in Michigan

Michigan State University
July 25, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

If you’re designing a mass timber school in Michigan, the approvals process has recently become more straightforward. The State has updated an old statute—Act 306 of 1937—that some building code officials had interpreted as in conflict with the Michigan Building Code (MBC) when it comes to mass timber in schools. The old version of the code specified only the use of “fire resisting materials”—including steel and concrete, but not wood—for school construction. Michigan enacted the out-of-date statute at a time before the commercialization of mass timber materials like cross-laminated timber and glulam, which research has since proven have excellent fire resistance properties. Nevertheless, the statute—not consistent with MBC—created red tape in the approvals process for at least one Michigan school in recent years. Seeing the need to resolve this inconsistency, the Michigan Legislature passed House Bill 4603, which amends Act.

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Inside the rebuilding of the Notre-Dame Cathedral, 5 years after devastating fire

CBC News
July 24, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

PARIS — With just days to go until the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Paris, many people may be casting their minds back to more than five years ago, when the city’s treasured Notre-Dame Cathedral was engulfed in flames. …Parisians themselves flocked in person to see their more than 800-year-old church burning. Many watched in horror as the iconic spire collapsed, and the wooden roof fell in. To this day, there is no clear answer as to what caused the fire. …The rebuilding and restoration won’t be ready quite in time for the Olympics, but it’s scheduled to reopen to the public on Dec. 8. …The tools used to rebuild the roof span the ages, from modern welding apparatuses to axes forged using medieval techniques, including some from Montreal. …The 2019 fire caused the complete destruction of Notre-Dame’s wooden roof. To rebuild, experts searched forests throughout France for thousands of perfect oak trees.

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Forestry

Powerful wildfires devastating Canada captured in satellite imagery

By Meredith Garfalo
Space.com
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Quick-moving wildfires continue to burn across Western Canada, keeping the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s GOES-R series satellites busy as they monitor hotspots and smoke plumes around the clock. On Wednesday evening in Jasper National Park, the largest national park in the Canadian Rockies, thousands of residents and tourists had to be evacuated as powerful fires scorched through the southern part of the community. According to the Associated Press, there were “significant losses” across the area as structures were burned to the ground. …Firefighters, weather forecasters and community leaders rely on satellites to provide a wider scope of fire and smoke movement; they use images taken by the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) instrument aboard each of the GOES-R satellites to aid with such monitoring needs. …This benefits firefighting efforts because it helps teams better understand each particular fire and also can help communities have more lead time to evacuate.

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Shuswap student’s Dream comes true with forestry internship

By Heather Black
Eagle Valley News
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chase’s Keegan Ashley will be living the dream this summer as one of five students to win a 2024 Green Dream Internship in forestry from the Forest Products Association of Canada. The program highlights the perspectives and experiences of students working in the forest sector for six weeks. Winners also receive a $1,000 scholarship for further education. Ashley, who is with the Interfor Adams Lake Division, will use social media to share his insights and create content that provides a unique look at his summer experiences. …”Keegan’s passion for the forest industry is rooted in his family history, which spans more than 100 years in the sector,” the company said on Instagram. “He plans to pursue a career in either manufacturing or the woodlands sector. Through the Green Dream Internship, Keegan hopes to share his journey and promote the opportunities the industry holds for young workers and students like himself.”

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Forest Enhancement Society Newsletter

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
July 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West
In this newsletter:
  • Safety tip from the BC Forest Safety Council.
  • FESBC announces its new Executive Director, Jason Fisher.
  • City of Kimberley has made progress to mitigate wildfire risk.
  • Meet our newest team member, Operations Manager, Tyler Field.
  • Meet our Faces of Forestry featured person, Ben Klassen.

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Jasper blaze exposes possible flaws in Parks Canada wildfire strategy

By Lorne Gunter
The Edmonton Sun
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Don’t blame the federal government for coming too slowly to Alberta’s aid in fighting the monster fire that has destroyed a significant portion of the Jasper townsite. The problem is the reverse: Blame the feds for being to slow to ask Alberta to become part of its integrated firefighting efforts inside Jasper National Park, where Parks Canada is in charge. Parks Canada lacks the technology and experience to fight a fire a night, meaning as two wildfires approached the resort town, efforts to control or at least divert them ceased in the dark. But Alberta has night-fighting capability. Alberta also has the equipment and expertise to throw up giant walls of water in front of giant walls of flame. Parks Canada doesn’t, and didn’t ask for Alberta’s help. Mostly, though, it’s fair to blame Parks Canada for ignoring years of warnings. 

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Lake Cowichan receives $400,000 grant from UBCM to deal with wildfire threats

By Robert Barron
The Lake Cowichan Gazette
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER ISLAND — With the dry season in full swing, and the threat of wildfires ever present, Lake Cowichan’s mayor is pleased the town’s application for a $400,000 FireSmart grant from the Union of B.C. Municipalities has been successful. Tim McGonigle said Lake Cowichan is closely surrounded by forests so the town initiated a FireSmart program a few years ago. He said the $400,000 in funding for the town’s Community Resiliency Project – Phase 1 from the UBCM’s 2024 FireSmart Community Funding program will be used, in part, to hire a person to oversee Lake Cowichan’s ongoing FireSmart program on a two-year contract. …McGonigle said the town has been undertaking remediation projects in its neighbourhoods for several years, largely funded through grants from the UBCM’s FireSmart program, and the plan is to expand the town’s program with the latest grant.

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Brothers aim to make lumber industry more sustainable in Colville

By Demetra Maragos
KHQ Spokane
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

COLVILLE, Wash.—Kurtis Vaagen of Vaagen Bros Lumber leads a decade-long project to restore 50,000 acres of the Colville National Forest, aiming to create fire-resilient forests for future generations while emphasizing community and environmental stewardship. …Over the last three decades, state and federal policy changes have restricted timber harvests on both state and federal forestlands, compelling the forest products industry to adopt more efficient and sustainable timber harvesting practices. One lumber company based in Colville, Vaagen Bros Lumber, bid on a contract to restore the Colville National Forest over a decade ago. Emphasizing sustainability and the creation of future forests, Kurtis Vaagen, Vice President of Vaagen Bros Lumber, stated that their goal is to restore the forest to be fire-resilient for future generations.

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Horse Gulch could have been prevented

By Nick Smith, executive director, Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities
Hungry Horse News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Nick Smith

Writing recently on X, Frontier Institute President and CEO Kendall Cotton observed that Montana’s Horse Gulch Fire is burning in a portion of Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest that was slated for landscape-scale thinning and controlled burns, that is, before anti-forestry litigation dramatically scaled back the planned effort, known as the “Middleman Project.” …the Middleman Project planned active forest management on 53,131 acres to mitigate wildfire risks …Two years after the project was approved, two anti-forestry groups sued to stop the project, claiming it violated federal law… The litigants focused on the adequacy and detail of the 584-page Environmental Assessment. According to the Frontier Institute’s research, in April 2024 the Forest Service agreed to a settlement to reduce the scale of the Middleman Project, forgoing almost all of the planned timber harvest and temporary road construction. They even agreed to pay $39,000 of taxpayer dollars to the anti-forestry groups to cover attorney fees!

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‘National forests are not national parks’: Logging debate in Whites divides forestry experts, environmentalists

By Kate Dario
New Hampshire Public Radio
July 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

NEW HAMPSHIRE, — The Liberty Trail on Mt. Chocorua is one of the most popular hiking paths in the White Mountain National Forest. …But the recent approval of a logging project in late June in the Sandwich Range has animated long simmering tensions over the best way to manage the national forest. The project will log more than 600 acres, a relatively tiny portion of the Sandwich Range’s more than 35,000 acreage. But it will cut trees near spots popular for hiking, bringing logging trucks to normally quiet slices of the forest. …Many Granite Staters may see the White Mountain National Forest as similar to a national park. But in reality, national forests are managed with economic considerations front of mind — which means supporting local timber industries as well as recreation-based tourism. “National forests are not national parks,” said Deputy Forest Service Chief Chris French. “They are intended to work under a multiple-use mandate.”

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A new National Diagnostic Protocol will help keep Australian pine plantations safe from there Pine Wood Nematode

By Andrea Wild
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
July 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — Pine Wilt Disease is a disease of pine trees. …The problem involves three bodies: a nematode, a fungus and a beetle. The nematode is a tiny roundworm only one millimetre long. It’s called Pine Wood Nematode (Bursaphelenchus xylophilus). It causes Pine Wilt Disease. When Pine Wilt Nematode is carried to a pine tree by a beetle, it feeds on cells inside the tree and multiplies very rapidly. Billions of nematodes — and the tree’s response to them — prevent water flow, causing the tree to wilt and die. …Trees killed by the nematodes are attractive to several species of beetles, which breed inside the damaged tree. The nematodes gather in the breeding chambers of the beetles, attach to the bodies of the beetles, and travel with them to new host trees. Dr Dan Huston… and his colleague, Dr Mike Hodda wrote the National Diagnostic Protocol for Pine Wood Nematode.

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Health & Safety

Massive fires rage in Pacific Northwest and Canada, sending smoke south

By Ian Livingston
The Washington Post
July 25, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, United States

Large wildfires in western Canada and the western United States have burned hundreds of thousands of acres over the past week, forcing thousands of people to evacuate, sending thick plumes of smoke southeastward and compromising air quality. Many of the fires have erupted from pinpoint lightning strikes amid record-breaking heat and expanding drought.  Several massive blazes covering at least 100,000 acres are burning in Oregon and western Canada. With the smoke from the fires infiltrating the Rockies, air quality alerts were in effect Wednesday morning in most of eastern Colorado, including Denver; northern Wyoming, including Yellowstone National Park; and eastern Oregon. Much of western Canada is also under air quality alerts. Some smoke has even spread into the Midwest. Both Denver and Chicago have ranked among the top 10 most polluted large cities in the world since Tuesday, according to IQAir.com. [to access the full story a Washington Post subscription is required]

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Forest Fires

Fire numbers fall in B.C. as fire near Golden destroys structures, spurs evacuation

Canadian Press in CTV News Vancouver
July 25, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Employees at Canadian Timberframes near Golden, B.C., had no warning when a nearby wildfire jumped the Columbia River and “barrelled through” as many as five nearby homes, the company said. “The fire was out of control. The winds changed. It came so fast,” said co-owner Stephanie Bowes. The Town of Golden, B.C., confirmed Thursday that the fire burning south of the community had destroyed “several structures”. …The BC Wildfire Service said a trend of cooler weather across much of the province had resulted in a dip in the number of fires burning and allowed crews an opportunity to make progress on some of the 425 active blazes. It’s the first time fire numbers have dropped in weeks. However, the service said the fires of note — those that pose a threat to people or property or are highly visible — had increased to five, with the addition of the Dogtooth fire.

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Jasper wildfire: Video and pictures show destruction within townsite

By Caley Gibson
Global News
July 25, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Video and pictures taken inside the Jasper townsite show absolute devastation and destruction caused by wildfires in western Alberta. …Parks Canada said the most significant structural damage is concentrated on the west side of town, southwest of Miette Avenue. The fire also damaged several bridges around the town and throughout the national park, including the Moberly Bridge and the Old Fort Point Bridge. Parks Canada said bridges on the Icefields Parkway will need to be assessed for structural damage as well, which will slow down access to the Maligne Lake and Highway 93. In a video posted online on Thursday morning, the extent of the damage became more apparent. The video shows buildings burned to the ground and scorched vehicles parked on the side of the road. Global News has confirmed the video was taken in the Jasper townsite but it’s not known exactly where in the town the video was captured.

Additional coverage in Orillia Matters, by Canadian Press: Alberta premier says up to half of all Jasper buildings destroyed by fire

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Lightning and a burning car pushed into a gully are blamed for wildfires scorching the West

By John Antczak and Holly Ramer
KRMG Tulsa’s News & Talk
July 26, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

A burning car pushed into a gully sparked California’s largest wildfire of the year, authorities said Thursday as they announced the arrest of a suspect. Meanwhile other blazes scorched the Pacific Northwest. Flames from the fire the man is accused of starting exploded into what is now the Park Fire, which has burned more than 195 square miles (505 square km) near the city of Chico. Evacuations were ordered in Butte and Tehama counties, with the blaze only 3% contained by Thursday evening. California authorities did not immediately name the man they arrested. Also in California near the Nevada line, about 1,000 people remained displaced from their homes Thursday after evacuations were ordered Monday night when lightning sparked the Gold Complex fires that have burned more than 4 square miles (10 square km) of brush and timber in the Plumas National Forest about 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Reno, Forest Service spokeswoman Adrienne Freeman said.

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