The Arizona Republic

‘PURE DEVASTATIO­N’

Low humidity contribute­s to blaze consuming wine country

- Doyle Rice

The flames that raced across California wine country left little more than smoldering ashes and eye-stinging smoke in their wake. House after house was gone, with only brick chimneys and charred laundry machines to mark sites that were once family homes.

The wildfires burned so hot that windows and tire rims melted off cars, leaving many vehicles resting on their steel axles. In one driveway, the glass backboard of a basketball hoop melted, dripped and solidified like a mangled icicle.

Newly homeless residents of Northern California took stock of their shattered lives Tuesday while the blazes that have killed at least 15 people and destroyed more than 2,000 homes and businesses kept burning. Hundreds more firefighte­rs joined the battle against the uncontaine­d flames.

“This is just pure devastatio­n, and it’s going to take us a while to get out and comb through all of this,” said Ken Pimlott, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. He said the state had “several days of fire weather conditions to come.”

The wildfires already rank among the five deadliest in California history, and officials expected the death toll to increase as the scope of destructio­n becomes clear. At least 100 people were injured during the blazes that started Sunday. Nearly 200 people were reported missing in Sonoma County alone.

A brutal combinatio­n of ferocious winds and near-record low humidity fueled the deadly wildfires that are scorching Northern California’s wine country and leaving a breath and taking trail of destructio­n.

Fierce northeast “Diablo” winds that circulated around a ridge of high pressure over the Great Basin blew through the region late Sunday, said Brian Mejia, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in Monterey, Calif.

The winds allowed the runaway fires to jump fire lines and decimate entire neighborho­ods, seemingly coming out of nowhere causing residents to run for their lives in the middle of the night — the worst possible time for such an emergency.

The toll on Tuesday was staggering and could get worse from the more than a dozen blazes, officials warned: 15 people killed, more than 100 injured, more than 2,000 businesses and homes

This is a “classic wildland fire pattern in California.”

Jan Null, Golden Gate Weather Services

destroyed.

Through much of the summer, winds blow into California from the ocean. But winds can switch in late September or early October to northeaste­rly from the bone-dry deserts of Nevada or Utah. This is a “classic wildland fire pattern in California, after five months of dry weather plus high pressure over the Great Basin, creating warm, dry winds,” said meteorolog­ist Jan Null of Golden Gate Weather Services.

In addition, as the winds howl down from the mountains toward coastal areas, they are compressed and become warmer. Then, as winds squeeze through canyons and valleys, they speed up, further fanning the flames.

Mejia said sustained winds were at least 40 mph in some spots; one gust registered as high as 79 mph in northern Sonoma County.

Earlier Sunday, the weather service had issued a “red flag” warning for the area, meaning conditions were ripe for the spread of wildfires.

Extremely low humidity — in the single digits, which is unusual for the area — also was a factor, Mejia said. Low humidity helps dry out vegetation, which makes it better fuel for fires.

A record wet winter of 2016-17 also allowed plenty of trees and brush to grow this spring, which became potent wildfire fuel.

The weather was similar to the conditions that led to the most destructiv­e fires in California history: the October 1991 firestorm that struck the Oakland and Berkeley hills. The blaze killed 25 people and destroyed 2,900 structures.

October is always a difficult time in California for wildfires, but this year the wildfire eruptions seem extreme even to the most seasoned California­n.

The fires that roared across Northern California probably were not started by lightning, according to the weather service, which did not detect any strikes late Sunday or early Monday. That means the spark for the blazes probably was man-made, whether accidental or deliberate.

That isn’t surprising: About 84% of wildfires in the United States are started by people, according to a comprehens­ive study this year that was published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

Officially, the cause of the fires remained under investigat­ion, said Barry Biermann, deputy incident commander for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. But he wouldn’t say the rash of fires seemed suspicious.

“The wind were extremely erratic,” he said. “During those conditions of high winds, it doesn’t take much to start a fire.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU/AP ?? A car sits in the middle of property destroyed by fires at Journey's End mobile-home park in Santa Rosa, California.
JEFF CHIU/AP A car sits in the middle of property destroyed by fires at Journey's End mobile-home park in Santa Rosa, California.
 ?? DAVID MCNEW/GETTY IMAGES ?? Fire Station 5 lies in ruins after a firestorm swept over the area in Santa Rosa, California. At least 1,500 homes have burned and 15 people have died.
DAVID MCNEW/GETTY IMAGES Fire Station 5 lies in ruins after a firestorm swept over the area in Santa Rosa, California. At least 1,500 homes have burned and 15 people have died.
 ?? JEFF CHIU, AP ?? Mary Caughey finds her wedding ring as residents sift through debris Tuesday in Kenwood, Calif.
JEFF CHIU, AP Mary Caughey finds her wedding ring as residents sift through debris Tuesday in Kenwood, Calif.
 ?? JOSH EDELSON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Flames overtake a structure as nearby homes burn Monday in the Napa wine region in California. Wind-driven fires whipped through the region.
JOSH EDELSON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Flames overtake a structure as nearby homes burn Monday in the Napa wine region in California. Wind-driven fires whipped through the region.

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