The Denver Post

In rubble, signs of giant tornado-like vortex

- By Rong-Gong Lin Ii, Joseph Serna and Louis Sahagun

REDDING, CALIF.» As authoritie­s sifted the rubble from the fire that burned more than 1,000 residences in Shasta County, they were startled by what they encountere­d.

A soaring transmissi­on tower was tipped over. Tiles were torn off the roofs of homes. Massive trees were uprooted. Vehicles were moved. In one spot, a fence post was bent around a tree with the bark on one side sheared off.

This was not typical wildfire damage. Rather, it was strong evidence of a giant, powerful, spinning vortex that accompanie­d the Carr fire on July 26. The tornado-like condition, lasting an hour and a half and fueled by extreme heat and intensely dry brush as California heats up to record levels, was captured in dramatic videos that have come to symbolize the destructiv­e power of what is now California’s sixth-most destructiv­e fire.

It may take years before scientists come to a consensus on what to exactly call this vortex — a fire whirl, as named by the National

Weather Service, or a fire tornado. Whatever it’s called, it’s exceptiona­lly rare to see a well-documented fire-fueled vortex leap out of a wildfire and enter a populated area with such size, power and duration.

It’s believed to have lasted from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on July 26 and struck some of the hardest-hit neighborho­ods in Redding.

This kind of fire twister has been documented before, but only a handful “at this sort of scale,” said Neil Lareau, assistant professor of atmospheri­c sciences at the University of Nevada, Reno, who was among those comfortabl­e calling it a fire tornado. “You’re starting with a rare event to begin with, and for it to actually impact a populated area makes it even rarer.”

The National Weather Service on Thursday said a preliminar­y estimate of maximum wind speeds in the vortex were in excess of 143 mph. That would make it equivalent to a twister with a rating of EF-3 out of a maximum of 5 on the Enhanced Fujita scale.

“Depending on the final number, this might actually be the strongest ‘tornado’ in California history, even if it wasn’t formally a tornado,” UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain said by email. There have been a couple of marginal EF-3 twisters in California’s past, “but this fire whirl was almost certainly longer-lived, larger in spatial scope and perhaps even stronger from a wind speed perspectiv­e.”

Six people have died in the Carr fire.

Radar analyzed by Lareau clearly shows a spinning vortex in northwest Redding as the Carr fire rapidly expanded on the evening of July 26.

Lareau roughly estimated the vortex as being as perhaps 500 yards in diameter at its base before possibly contractin­g. “It’s covering blocks,” he said.

“It was definitely a massive one, and that just speaks to how intense the heating was,” said National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Mike Kochasic. “It created such a massive whirl that it looked like a tornado … and it takes an impressive amount of heating and local wind swirling up to create something like that. It was quite a monster.”

It’s possible for fire vortexes to “move fairly quick out in front of the main line of the fire — it can spread a little bit quicker compared to the main fire,” Kochasic said.

Wind damage was also reported in areas untouched by flames.

A team of officials led by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection is looking into the vortex as part of its investigat­ion of the blaze.

This vortex is dramatical­ly different from the garden-variety whirls that have been more of a curiosity in past fires, which are more like dust devils in terms of scale, rising for perhaps two stories and lasting for less than 10 minutes.

Lareau’s radar data show that one of the worst-hit areas was on Quartz Hill Road, around a Y-shaped junction of electric transmissi­on lines — a matter of hundreds of feet from where Melody Bledsoe, 70, and her great-grandchild­ren, Emily, 4, and James Roberts, 5, died as the fire swept through their home.

Half a mile west from the Bledsoes’ home is Lake Keswick Estates, where Justin Sanchez, 37, fled in the back of a pickup with irreplacea­ble photos lining its bed, as his father, Greg, 69, drove them away from what he called a fire tornado.

“Oh, my gosh! Oh, my God!” Sanchez wailed as he sought to record what he expected would be the last few moments of his neighborho­od before his home burned. His phone camera captures a giant vertical, cone-shaped cloud — appearing with an orange glow at the base — spinning counterclo­ckwise. Flames can be seen in the foreground.

“It was like the movie ‘Twister,’ ” Sanchez said in a telephone interview. “It was a massive, massive, huge tornado. … It was spinning so slow on the outside, but there were heavy, massive pieces of shrapnel just floating around with the fire.”

Sanchez said he could see the blaze earlier that day, but it wasn’t traveling particular­ly fast. Then he heard his neighbor shout, “It just jumped the river! It’s headed our way!”

“Within a matter of 10 minutes there, once the ‘fire-nado’ started almost inching on our neighborho­od, the winds had to have been 40 to 60 mph winds … the sky got dark,” Sanchez said. “I didn’t understand how a fire and tornado could combine into one massive death machine.”

He said he dashed into the house a couple of times to grab some photos, but the second time he came out, the fire had come probably within a football field away. Sanchez said the vortex traveled three to four miles in just 15 minutes.

A late gust was so intense that the last keepsakes he nabbed were blown out of his arms.

“I knew everything was going to become lost, and it was going to end up killing people on the way. It was nothing like I’ve ever seen or heard of in my life,” he said.

As Redding Police Chief Roger Moore evacuated residents from the River Ridge neighborho­od east of the Sacramento River, he watched the growing flames and smoke plume approach the western bank of the Sacramento River, hop over it, grow, then come together as what he called a “plume tornado.”

Trees appeared to be levitating, and branches and sheet-metal roofs seemed to orbit the column, Moore said. Uprooted objects were launched into the air and ignited midflight. Vegetation and homes hundreds of feet from the column caught fire before the twister arrived, he said. It was as loud as a roaring jet engine.

“Wherever the center of the tornado went, it decimated it. You’re looking at this whole column of fire, and it’s just monstrous,” Moore said.

The swirl of fire and smoke destroyed sections of the Stanford Manor community. The only things left standing were the homes on the edges. Some would ignite; some would remain standing.

“I don’t know how fast that tornado was moving, but it was probably faster than a human can run,” Moore said.

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