El Dorado News-Times

California’s Dixie fire generates whirl

Blaze is 25% contained, but nearly 500,000 acres across four counties burned

- LILA SEIDMAN

Nearly a month after igniting, the Dixie fire burning in Northern California has destroyed nearly 900 structures and continues to exhibit extreme behavior, officials said.

The fire, which has seared 487,764 acres across four counties north of Sacramento, is continuing to generate its own weather.

Around midnight Monday, an explosive storm cloud rose roughly 40,000 feet above the eastern portion of the blaze.

The pyrocumulo­nimbus cloud was so intense that it sparked lightning, as well as fiery spinning vortexes known as fire whirls, said Rich Thompson, a National Weather Service incident meteorolog­ist for the Dixie fire.

One large whirl captured by an infrared camera shows a thin tendril snaking high above the rest of the flames. Thompson estimates that it soared 300 to 400 feet above an area west of Antelope Lake, where evacuation­s were ordered this week.

“It’s a sign to let people know that this fire still has a lot of potential,” Thompson said. “It’s actually something that was very impressive to watch.”

A fire whirl — sometimes likened to a tornado — is generated when hot air surges upward and begins to spin. As it spirals, it can collect ash, smoke and embers and form a tight, spinning vortex, like the one observed Monday night, Thompson said. The spinning action can “throw those embers across fire lines, so it can cause some really significan­t control issues,” he added.

The second-largest blaze in California history, the Dixie fire has burned at least 893 homes and commercial buildings and threatens more than 16,000 others, according to the latest incident report.

Crews made progress on the blaze over the last several days, and containmen­t has climbed to 25% — up from 21% Monday.

The fire, which is burning across Plumas, Butte, Tehama and Lassen counties, last week leveled the remote Sierra town of Greenville and destroyed homes in Canyondam, Indian Falls Canyon, Chester and Warner Valley, Plumas County Sheriff Todd Johns said Monday evening.

Many people are unable to return to their communitie­s as the fire threats and evacuation orders continue.

“Many of our friends and neighbors have lost everything, and I know for those folks, the healing and recovery process will begin when they are able to see the damage that has been done to their property,” Johns said.

Authoritie­s have issued evacuation orders for the Antelope Lake area and Janesville to the north, and firefighte­rs are conducting proactive structure-protection operations in those areas, said Tim Jones, a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokespers­on.

Pacific Gas & Electric has said its equipment might have sparked the Dixie fire, which broke out July 13 near the utility’s power station in Feather River Canyon, as well as another fire that later merged with Dixie.

Just as firefighte­rs are beginning to make headway on the blaze, conditions this week are expected to change for the worse.

Heavy smoke that had converged over the fire moderated temperatur­es and fire behavior, officials said; the cover gave crews time to make some progress fighting the fire. But the smoke began clearing out Monday, paving the way for temperatur­es to again soar and humidity levels to plunge.

The weather is part of the drought and heat, fueled by climate change, that have dried out the western U.S. and spurred rapid fire growth.

Temperatur­es in the fire area topped 100 degrees Fahrenheit on Wednesday and are expected to do the same today. Humidity could drop into the low teens during the daytime this week, with potentiall­y little to no recovery at night, forecaster­s said.

Also complicati­ng firefighti­ng efforts: Afternoon winds are expected, with southwest gusts up to 20 mph. And beginning today, there’s a chance of isolated thundersto­rms that bring the possibilit­y of dry lightning and erratic winds.

“Firefighte­rs are still very much on heightened alert,” Thompson said.

Much of the southern and southweste­rn portions of the fire are “buttoned up,” but there’s room for significan­t growth on the north and northeast, he said.

Some areas along the eastern edge of the fire are located in burn scar areas, which offer some natural protection because the vegetation there has been thinned out by previous fires, Thompson said.

Dixie is one of 96 blazes raging across the West, said Rocky Opliger, an incident commander for California Interagenc­y Incident Team 4. More than 25,000 firefighte­rs are deployed to fight the fires, with nearly 6,000 assigned to Dixie alone, he said.

To the west of the Dixie fire, the lightning-sparked Monument fire continues to spread, with little containmen­t, in Trinity County. The blaze, which ignited July 30 near Monument Peak, had grown to nearly 58,000 acres and was 3% contained on Tuesday, according to the latest incident report.

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