Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Windy conditions threaten to stoke large wildfires

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – Firefighte­rs throughout the state were bracing for strengthen­ing winds forecast this weekend that threaten to fan the flames of multiple Northern California wildfires, including the deadly Carr Fire.

As of Thursday, there were 18 wildfires burning across the state. Although a number of them had scorched fewer than 100 acres, those smaller fires are contributi­ng to the drain on critical resources, especially as firefighte­rs from around the state and nation are being called to battle the big blazes.

A red-flag warning was issued Thursday for parts of Northern California, including Redding, which has already been devastated by the massive Carr Fire. The warning, covering the fire’s entire burn area, began at 8 p.m. Thursday and will be in effect until 11 p.m. Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. Red-flag conditions are declared when sustained winds are predicted to reach around 15-20 miles per hour, combined with high heat and low humidity.

The Carr Fire, the largest fire now burning in California, grew to 125,842 acres overnight and remained 35 percent contained as of Thursday morning. The fire has killed six people in Shasta County, including two firefighte­rs, and destroyed 1,555 structures.

The blaze is growing toward the northwest, mostly in hard-to-access, forested areas with dry brush and timber that burn intensely and quickly, said Scott Mclean, deputy chief for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Calfire.

But that could change with a low pressure system that’s expected to move through the area from the north, officials warn. It could create wind gusts of up to 30 miles per hour Saturday in valleys where the fire is burning, said weather service meteorolog­ist Mike Kochasic.

Such winds could push flames to the south or southeast, toward more populated areas.

“That’s a different wind pattern … so it could turn the fire around and come in a different direction,” Mclean said.

Firefighte­rs are preparing for that potential shift by strengthen­ing their containmen­t lines on the southern end of the fire, fighting the flames directly where they can and adding contingenc­y lines, said Calfire spokesman Daniel Potter.

As the low pressure system moves south, gusty winds could also affect the two largest fires in Mendocino County, where a red-flag warning will be in effect from 11 a.m. today until 11 p.m. Saturday, Kochasic said. A red-flag warning is also set for Saturday for northern Sierra Nevada ridge tops, where gusts could reach 35 miles per hour.

The River and Ranch fires in southern Mendocino County have scorched a combined 110,168 acres and were 39 percent contained as of Thursday morning, according to Calfire. In those fires, 14,600 residents have been evacuated and 14 homes have been destroyed, according to Calfire.

Four new fires ignited Wednesday and blazed through a rough total of 940 acres in Northern California, Mclean said.

By Thursday morning those fires were at least 80 percent contained. The Eel fire, which started Wednesday in northern Mendocino County, had burned 1,000 acres and was only 5 percent contained.

“Very steep terrain and fire intensity on the fire front make it difficult to insert crews in certain areas of the fire,” according to a Calfire report.

The Ferguson Fire, which started three weeks ago near Yosemite National Park, is expected to burn more intensely as an inversion layer that has hovered over the central Sierra Nevada lifts this weekend.

The northern tip of the 68,610-acre fire grew overnight toward Moss Creek, nearing the Merced Grove. That area contains the smallest of Yosemite’s giant sequoia groves, and is located near Yosemite’s Big Oak Flat entrance, according to authoritie­s.

Spot fires have sprung up in that area, fueled by dead trees. Bulldozer operators had surveyed the area Wednesday night and determined it wasn’t safe for them to start building a fire line until daylight. Because of smoke in the area, officials closed Highway 120.

Although the western flank of the Ferguson Fire is largely dormant, the fire remains active on its eastern side, near Yosemite West. Officials chose to evacuate the small community of Wawona on Tuesday when the southern end of the fire grew as well.

A forecast of wind gusts of up to 40 miles per hour this weekend could continue pushing the fire east toward the park, said Kochasic.

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