The Columbus Dispatch

Northern California wildfire creates flame tornado

- By Paul Elias

SAN FRANCISCO — A deadly Northern California wildfire burned so hot in dry and windy conditions that it birthed a record-breaking tornado of flame, officials said Friday.

They also warned of worsening conditions throughout the region.

Winds in the “fire whirl” created July 26 near Redding, California, reached speeds of 143 mph, a speed that rivaled some of the most-destructiv­e Midwest tornadoes, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Duane Dykema said. The whirl uprooted trees and tore roofs from homes, Dykema said.

The whirl measured a 3 on the five-level Enhanced Fujita scale, which scientists use to classify the strength of tornadoes, he said. California has not recorded a tornado of that strength since 1978.

That fire continues to burn about 100 miles south of the Oregon border as firefighte­rs there and throughout Northern California brace for worsening conditions this weekend. A 747 Global Airtanker makes a fire-retardant drop in front of advancing flames Thursday night in Lakeport, Calif.

The weather service issued warnings for critical fireweathe­r conditions into Saturday, saying a series of dry low-pressure systems passing through the region would bring afternoon wind gusts.

“This is a particular­ly dangerous situation with extremely low humidity and high winds. New fires will grow rapidly out of control, in some cases people may not be able to evacuate safely in time should a fire approach,” the weather service said in its bulletin for

the Mendocino area north of San Francisco.

Forecaster­s said areas with the highest threat include the massive blaze near Redding and two fires burning next to each other around Clearlake, about 100 miles north of San Francisco.

The Redding fire has grown to 206 square miles and has destroyed 1,060 homes and many other structures.

Two firefighte­rs and four other people have been killed since the blaze, which ignited July 23, raced with extraordin­ary fury toward the region’s largest city. More than 1,300 homes remained threatened.

Wildfires typically create whirls but rarely of the strength of the one recorded July 26, Dykema said.

Whirls are created when hot air rises and twists tightly, he said. The hotter the fire, the faster the air rises and the tighter it twists until it takes off as a tornado.

To the southwest of Redding, new evacuation­s were ordered late Thursday at the Mendocino Complex, where twin fires have ravaged a combined 240 square miles, destroyed 41 residences and threatened 9,200 homes.

One of the fires rapidly expanded overnight.

In Sierra Nevada, firefighte­rs achieved 41 percent containmen­t of a 115-square-mile forest fire that has shut down Yosemite Valley and other adjacent portions of Yosemite National Park.

The fire has reached into remote areas of the country’s third-oldest national park. Workers who live in Yosemite’s popular Valley region were ordered to leave Friday because of inaccessib­le roads.

The fire also killed two firefighte­rs.

A new report says the first firefighte­r, a California bulldozer operator, nearly slipped off a steep mountain trail three times before his vehicle finally rolled into a ravine and fatally crushed him.

Each earlier slip alone qualified as a “near miss” warning that the centuryold mining trail could collapse, according to the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection’s preliminar­y report.

Braden Varney, 36, was working alone overnight July 14 fighting the wildfire while his assistant went to get a new hydraulic hose. Varney’s radio wasn’t communicat­ing with headquarte­rs, so his assistant relayed messages — until they lost contact.

The report says the death of the 10-year veteran highlights the need for better risk assessment, communicat­ion and supervisio­n.

Officials have not said how the other three firefighte­rs died fighting blazes near Yosemite and Redding.

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