2nd UPDATE — Another siege of smoke? It’s here and may last most of the week, forecaster says

Tuesday morning's air pollution readings at the state Department of Ecology website

Tuesday morning's air pollution readings at the state Department of Ecology website

Today’s overcast conditions on the North Olympic Peninsula aren’t a result of clouds or high fog, according to the National Weather Service.

Unlike Sunday’s yellow-orange siege of smoke, the fire smoke is staying higher aloft today.

“Most of what you see is smoke,” said Art Gaebel, forecaster for the National Weather Service in Seattle.

The gray skies are caused by wildfires in both Canada and Washington, and the smoky gloom expected to stick around for at least a week, Gaebel said.

“We don’t see this around here very often” he said.

Gaebel said most of the smoke is staying higher in the atmosphere and duplicates the appearance of high clouds — the so-called “June gloom” that didn’t occur last month. Above the smoke is sunshine.

The smoky skies cover most of the North Olympic Peninsula and southeast into the Seattle area, in addition to even smokier areas to the north into British Columbia, he said.

The Weather Service has said that the severity of the smoke cover will fluctuate depending on fire activity and wind patterns.

The forecast says a small upper-level system is expected to arrive this weekend, but it was uncertain if it would be strong enough to move the smoke off the Peninsula.

Cooler, more seasonable temperatures are expected through the week.

Olympic Region Clean Air Agency has three air quality monitoring stations in the North Olympic Peninsula, all of which showed good air quality because the smoke is high off the ground.

At 10:30 a.m. the North Olympic Peninsula’s monitoring stations showed the following Washington Air Quality Advisory values (You can get current air pollution readings at the state Department of Ecology website, https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/enviwa/ . You can also get readings at https://www.orcaa.org/air/current-air-quality/ ):

■ Cheeka Peak near Neah Bay — 25

■ Port Angeles at Stevens Middle School — 32

■ Port Townsend on San Juan Avenue —28

Washington Air Quality Advisory values are:

■ Good — 0-49.

■ Moderate — 50-99.

■ Unhealthy for sensitive groups — 100-149.

■ Unhealthy — 150-199.

■ Very unhealthy — 200-249.

■ Hazardous — 250 and above.

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Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.

Here are current air pollution readings at the state Department of Ecology website, https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/enviwa/ . You can also get readings at https://www.orcaa.org/air/current-air-quality/ :

Here’s our earlier story:

PORT ANGELES — The skies began to clear Monday, allowing residents and visitors to begin to breathe easy again after a plume of smoke from several large wildfires in Canada drifted across the Strait of Juan de Fuca and spread over the North Olympic Peninsula.

But that could change today.

Wind patterns that helped clear the smoke on Monday may reverse as the wind shifts again, said Allen Kam, meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Seattle.

Kam said the severity of today’s possible smoke inundation depends on how actively the Canadian fires burn.

On Sunday, heavy smoke choked off the sun and created a dark orange-hued afternoon sky that reduced Peninsula air quality from its normal “good” rating to “unhealthy” in many areas — and even to “unhealthy” in the Neah Bay area, according to the Olympic Region Clean Air Agency’s air quality monitoring stations.

Air quality on the Peninsula usually registers well into the “good” category on the air quality advisory scale of the Olympic Region Clean Air Agency (ORCAA), said Odelle Hadley, the agency’s senior air monitoring specialist.

ORCAA has air quality monitoring stations at Cheeka Peak near Neah Bay, in Port Angeles and in Port Townsend that measure air-borne particulate matter 2.5 microns in diameter or larger.

In the summer, a typical air quality advisory score for the North Olympic Peninsula is lower than 30, representing a rate of only 2 to 6 particles per hour, Hadley said.

Air quality advisory categories are:

■   Good — 0-49.

■   Moderate — 50-99.

■   Unhealthy for sensitive groups — 100-149.

■   Unhealthy — 150-199.

■   Very unhealthy — 200-249.

■   Hazardous — 250 and above.

On Sunday evening, the Cheeka Peak air monitoring station reached a score of 186 — categorized as “unhealthy” on the ORCAA scale.

Under an “unhealthy” air advisory, everyone should limit time spent outdoors, avoid exercising outdoors, including sports teams, and choose non-strenuous indoor activities.

People with asthma, respiratory infection, diabetes, lung or heart disease, those who have had a stroke, infants, children, pregnant women and those older than 65 should stay indoors.

In Port Angeles, the score reached 113, and in Port Townsend the score topped out at 107, representing air that was “unhealthy for sensitive groups.”

Under an “unhealthy for sensitive groups” advisory, people than average may have breathing problems or have worsened symptoms of existing asthma or lung disease.

People with heart or lung disease, asthma, diabetes, infants, children, adults older than 65, pregnant women, or who have had a stroke should limit time spent outdoors, according to the advisory.

Hadley noted that the Port Angeles monitor showed a score of 167 on Saturday night, during the height of fireworks, and dropped back to “good” levels by 3 a.m. Sunday morning.

Current ORCAA air quality scores can be monitored online at www.orcaa.org.

Five major fires have been burning on Vancouver Island.

According to the British Columbia Wildfire Service website, the two largest fires were uncontained on Monday, with three others alo remaining active.

■   Boulder Creek Fire, 14 miles northwest of Pemberton, exceeded 12,000 acres and was zero percent contained.

■   Elaho Fire, 42 miles west of Pemberton, has burned more than 49,000 acres, and was zero percent contained.

■   Dog Mountain Fire at Sproat Lake, was 237 acres and burning aggressively on a mountaintop on a peninsula almost entirely surrounded by the lake.

■   Old Sechelt Mine Fire, 1 mile west of Sechelt, was 197 acres, 40 percent contained.

■   Tsulquate River Fire, 1 mile west of Port Hardy, was about 40 acres, 20 percent contained, and was showing extreme fire behavior.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.

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