Lodi News-Sentinel

Yosemite wildfire, controlled burn making local skies smokey

- By Michael McGough

Smoke is blowing westward toward the Sacramento area from both a wildfire near Yosemite and a prescribed burn in the Eldorado National Forest on Thursday afternoon.

The U.S. Forest Service in a news release earlier this week warned that activity was ramping up on a “multi-year 8,800 acre prescribed fire” at the northern ridge above Caples Creek near Highway 88. Eldorado National Forest officials completed ignitions Tuesday, and will continue to monitor the prescribed burn, with smoke anticipate­d to last for “several days.”

The Briceburg Fire, which is burning near the entrance to Yosemite National Park and has prompted evacuation orders in Mariposa County, is also sending a significan­t amount of smoke northwestw­ard through portions of Tuolumne, Calaveras, Amador, El Dorado, Sacramento and San Joaquin counties.

The National Weather Service posted satellite imagery and radar forecasts showing that smoke activity is expected to grow heavier throughout the late afternoon and early evening from the two fires.

In eastern Sacramento County and much of El Dorado County, including Folsom and Placervill­e, most of the smoke is coming from the Caples prescribed burn and is expected to get thicker as the afternoon progresses. Some residents posted to social media complainin­g of smoke in those areas earlier in the week, before Thursday’s wind patterns began to push the smoke Sacramento’s way.

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