Lake County Record-Bee

RAINS MIGHT NOT PREVENT FIRE SEASON AHEAD

- By Hayley Smith hayley.smith@latimes.com

It's something of a Golden State paradox: Dry winters can pave the way for dangerous fire seasons fueled by dead vegetation, but wet winters — like the one the state has seen so far — can also spell danger by spurring heaps of new growth that can later act as fuel for flames.

Experts say it's too soon to know with certainty what the upcoming fire season has in store. The atmospheri­c rivers that pounded California in January have left the state snow-capped and wet, which could be a fire deterrent if soils stay damp.

But if no more rains arrive — or if other, less predictabl­e factors such as lightning storms and heat waves develop later in the year — all that progress could go out the window.

“The dice are loaded for a weak fire season, but there are multiple things that could cause it go the other way,” said Park Williams, a bioclimato­logist at UCLA.

There's no question the recent rains offered some relief. The storms moved most of California out of the extreme drought categories in which it has been mired for more than three years, and portions of the Sierra Nevada are still buried under multiple feet of snow.

But lower-elevation areas could be at risk, Williams said. That includes the hills around Los Angeles and the foothills of the Sierra Nevada and northern coastal ranges, which are bursting with new grasses that can easily dry out.

“This year, we've loaded up the ground with a whole bunch of new vegetation, and so in summertime — as long as the summer is hot and dry — the probabilit­y of grass fires is probably higher this year than normal,” he said.

Capt. Robert Foxworthy, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said

 ?? PHOTO: SANDY HUFFAKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Visitors overlook the Pacific Ocean as rain and wind batter the coast due to Hurricane Kay on Sept. 9, 2022in La Jolla, Calif.
PHOTO: SANDY HUFFAKER/GETTY IMAGES Visitors overlook the Pacific Ocean as rain and wind batter the coast due to Hurricane Kay on Sept. 9, 2022in La Jolla, Calif.
 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Crews battle the Riviera Fire last year.
FILE PHOTO Crews battle the Riviera Fire last year.

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