Los Angeles Times

An eerie, fitting end to summer

With ash dusting the Southland like snow, Labor Day 2020 has vibes of apocalypse.

- By Deborah Netburn

Searing hot temperatur­es. Eerie yellow-gray skies. The sharp scent of smoke and flakes of ash that rained down upon the land.

No, it wasn’t the apocalypse. It was Labor Day weekend in Southern California — a fittingly strange and frightenin­g capstone to a strange and frightenin­g summer.

Angelenos were already on edge after six months of surrealism brought on by the global COVID-19 pandemic, but many were pushed to the brink of sanity this holiday weekend as temperatur­e records were shattered in Woodland Hills

(121), Chino (121), Topanga (118) and Pasadena (114).

Raging fires in the Angeles National Forest and Yucaipa added to the endof-days vibe. And the National Weather Service’s warning that Santa Ana winds are likely to blow through Los Angeles and Ventura counties Tuesday and Wednesday only upped the anxiety levels.

“Ashes everywhere. Horrible air. Extreme heat. Santa Ana’s expected tomorrow. COVID in the air. #enough2020,” Ana Flores of Duarte tweeted Monday, summing up the situation perfectly.

California­ns across the Southland posted pictures of cars dusted with fine, papery ash and cinematic scenes of a ghostly orange sun peeking through the ubiquitous smoke.

People reported ash raining from the skies in the San Gabriel Valley, as well as in more-distant points such as Glendale, Pico Rivera, Whittier and even Santa Monica and Redondo Beach.

“This is the only snow we get in LA,” Kelly Anne Greer tweeted alongside a picture of her ash-covered Toyota.

That falling ash doesn’t just look ominous. It may contain toxic chemicals, including some polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns and metals such as arsenic or lead that can be released from burned materials, said Nahal Mogharabi, a spokesman for the South Coast Air Quality Management District.

“When we talk about the health effects of wildfire smoke, our primary concern is with inhalation of the small particles,” she said. “However, when it comes to ash, where the particles are generally larger, the concern is about toxics, which depends on the compositio­n of the materials.”

The South Coast AQMD advised the public to avoid skin contact with ash that has fallen from the sky in the wake of a wildfire.

Do not clean up ash yourself if you have lung or heart problems, and never use leaf blowers to blast it away.

Instead, the AQMD recommends cleaning ash with damp cloths, or if it’s on your car, visiting a carwash.

The agency also said to direct ash-filled water to ground areas and away from the runoff system.

And as if all this ash, heat and fire weren’t bad enough, Ryan Ward, a graduate student in environmen­tal engineerin­g at Caltech, noted Sunday that the ground level ozone peaked at 200 parts per billion — well above the average healthy amount of 70 parts per billion.

“Absolutely crazy #atmoschem in Pasadena/ LA today,” he tweeted alongside a picture of a piece of ash that had just fallen in the palm of his hand. “It’s time to put that sarcophagu­s back in the ground and return 2020 to regularly scheduled vibes!!”

 ?? Gabriella Angotti-Jones Los Angeles Times ?? A LAYER OF HAZE covers the mountains Monday as the Bobcat fire burns in Angeles National Forest. Ash from the blaze fell on many Southland communitie­s.
Gabriella Angotti-Jones Los Angeles Times A LAYER OF HAZE covers the mountains Monday as the Bobcat fire burns in Angeles National Forest. Ash from the blaze fell on many Southland communitie­s.
 ?? Gabriella Angotti-Jones Los Angeles Times ?? THE ROAD to Mt. Wilson Observator­y is closed Monday as the Bobcat fire continues to burn in Angeles National Forest. The ash that fell across the Southland didn’t just look ominous — one air quality expert notes that the material could contain toxic chemicals.
Gabriella Angotti-Jones Los Angeles Times THE ROAD to Mt. Wilson Observator­y is closed Monday as the Bobcat fire continues to burn in Angeles National Forest. The ash that fell across the Southland didn’t just look ominous — one air quality expert notes that the material could contain toxic chemicals.

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