Los Angeles Times

State doubles previous fire record

More than 4 million acres have burned, eclipsing the 2018 wildfire acreage total.

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th and Joseph Serna

California’s biggest wildf ire season reached a new milestone Sunday, with state officials announcing that the state has now surpassed 4 million acres burned, more than double the state’s previous record.

With crews on the biggest f ire of them all, the August Complex, reporting more vigorous activity within the fire’s perimeter Sunday and another warm day ahead of them, “difficult conditions remain,” officials said.

Before this year, 2018 was California’s biggest year for wildfires, with more than 1.8 million acres burned.

The f ires this year have burned an area larger than the state of Connecticu­t and killed 31 people, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. More than 100 people died in the 2018 f ire season, the majority of them in the Camp f ire disaster in

Paradise.

Fires this year have destroyed more than 8,200 structures and displaced tens of thousands of people.

Fortunatel­y, the property damage toll has not yet approached that of 2018, when more than 17,000 homes and 700 businesses were destroyed.

Still, the sheer magnitude is staggering. Of the 20 largest wildfires in California’s history, f ive burned within the space of a couple of months this year, consuming a combined total of nearly 2.4 million acres.

Lightning in August ignited many of California’s biggest blazes, but scientists say climate change has also contribute­d to the conflagrat­ions. It was the hottest August on record in California, and trees and brush were already abnormally dry and combustibl­e after Northern and Central California saw exceptiona­lly dry conditions last winter.

The August Complex f ire, the largest f ire in the state’s history, came back to life Saturday night after winds pushed away the smoke and fed oxygen to the f lames. Residents in the rural towns of Wildwood and Platina were told to prepare

to leave when the f ire jumped a containmen­t line Saturday, but the clearer air has also offered an opportunit­y for f irefighter­s, officials said.

“On the aircraft side, it’s good because they need the visibility,” said Cal Fire spokeswoma­n April Newman.

As the week progresses, the weather is expected to work in f irefighter­s’ favor, according to the National Weather Service.

Though winds will continue to push the fire around on hilltops and sour air in the valleys with smoke, the ridge of high pressure that’s been keeping the air warm and dry will be displaced by midweek with cooler, more humid air that will also feed moisture back into the vegetation during the night, according to Sunday’s forecast.

Until then, much of f iref ighters’ efforts will be focused on the f ire’s northern and western zones, where the persistent­ly warm conditions in recent days have pushed the f lames over containmen­t lines, up steep hills and into treetops.

On both f lanks of the fire, crews challenged by rugged terrain are building contingenc­y lines — a more distant, secondary defensive line away from the fire.

The August Complex fire has burned 985,304 acres and was 51% contained Sunday morning.

Fire officials have reported 100% containmen­t of two other large f ire complexes that were sparked by lightning in mid- August — the 396,624- acre SCU Lightning Complex f ire in Santa Clara, Alameda and Stanislaus counties, and the 363,220- acre LNU Lightning Complex f ire in Napa, Sonoma, Lake, Yolo and So

lano counties.

Fire crews on Sunday also reported progress against the Creek fire, burning in the Sierra National Forest, which was 315,413 acres and 62% contained.

The f ire’s southern and western f lanks, closest to large population centers, have been tamped down, but the fire’s eastern edge f lared up overnight and jumped a bulldozed containmen­t line, the f ire’s operations commander, Don Fregulia, said in a morning update.

The North Complex f ire, which killed 15 people after it raced into the towns of Berry Creek and Feather Falls, was 317,459 acres and 83% contained Sunday.

In the Los Angeles area, crews f ighting the Bobcat f ire in the Angeles National Forest said they were mostly focusing on mopping up and strengthen­ing containmen­t lines Sunday.

Fire officials said a 300acre internal island of unburned fuel northeast of Mt. Wilson burned Sat

urday, producing a smoke plume.

The f ire has burned 115,548 acres, was 84% contained and has destroyed 87 homes and 83 other structures as of Sunday, though that number could rise as teams continue to perform damage assessment­s, officials said.

The f ire continued to wreak havoc on the region’s air quality, with officials forecastin­g it would be unhealthy through the weekend for those in parts of the

San Gabriel and San Fernando valleys, as well as the San Gabriel Mountains, and unhealthy for sensitive people in many other places in Los Angeles County.

Those with heart disease, asthma or other respirator­y conditions were advised to limit outdoor activities, the county Department of Public Health said in a news release.

Conditions around the fire are expected to cool later in the week, said National Weather Service meteorolog­ist David Gomberg. Though cooler air has an obvious benefit for the crews outside, it also can limit the f ire’s potential behavior, Gomberg said.

When there’s a large f ire on a day with little wind,

rising hot air can play an outsize role in inf luencing what the f ire does, experts say. The hot air and rising smoke can become so powerful that they overcome outside inf luences and control the f ire’s weather, making it more extreme and unpredicta­ble as a plumedomin­ated fire.

With temperatur­es dropping into the 80s at the highest elevations and 90s in the foothills by midweek, that plume- dominated f ire potential is expected to decrease, Gomberg said.

“The hotter it is, the worse it can be,” he said. “You still have some potential for some plume developmen­t, but it won’t be as severe as what we’ve seen the past couple of weeks.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? THIS YEAR, f ires in California have burned an area larger than the state of Connecticu­t, destroyed more than 8,200 structures, displaced thousands and killed 31. Above, the Glass f ire in Calistoga, Calif., on Oct. 1.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times THIS YEAR, f ires in California have burned an area larger than the state of Connecticu­t, destroyed more than 8,200 structures, displaced thousands and killed 31. Above, the Glass f ire in Calistoga, Calif., on Oct. 1.
 ?? CLIMATE CHANGE Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? helped create conditions for monster wildfires, scientists say. An exceptiona­lly dry winter and extremely hot summer created tinder ripe for ignition when a lightning storm rolled through the state in August. Above, the Glass f ire in Calistoga on Oct. 1.
CLIMATE CHANGE Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times helped create conditions for monster wildfires, scientists say. An exceptiona­lly dry winter and extremely hot summer created tinder ripe for ignition when a lightning storm rolled through the state in August. Above, the Glass f ire in Calistoga on Oct. 1.

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