Los Angeles Times

Northern California fires stir own weather

Dixie and Tamarack burn nearly 100,000 acres, sparking pyrocumulu­s clouds, lightning, other dangerous conditions

- By Hayley Smith

A pair of fast-moving wildfires in Northern California have chewed through nearly 100,000 acres while spewing noxious smoke, generating pyrocumulu­s clouds, lightning and other dangerous weather conditions and adding to the state’s growing wildfire misery.

The state’s northern reaches have been hit hard by a series of big wildfires this summer, with officials alarmed by the number of blazes that have broken out so early in the season. California already is outpacing last year’s fire season as climate change is allowing blazes to spread faster and the terrain to burn more quickly.

Exhausted firefighte­rs had hoped for a reprieve after battling several forest fires — including one that burned through the small town of Doyle — worsened by a summer heat wave that has baked the Pacific Northwest and the upper reaches of Northern California.

But two new fires have raged out of control over the last few days, creating a new fronts of battle.

“Right now,” said Tamarack fire incident spokesman Mike DeFries, “there’s a lot happening all at once.”

The 5-day-old Dixie fire spanning Butte and Plumas counties has stymied fire crews as it continues to swell — doubling in size to roughly 60,000 acres Tuesday with only 15% containmen­t, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Pacific Gas & Electric said its utility equipment may have sparked the fire, after an electric worker found two blown fuses and a tree leaning onto a power line conductor in the area near the ignition point of the blaze.

The fire grew so volatile Monday that it generated its own pyrocumulo­nimbus cloud, which created its own lightning, said Scott Rowe, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento.

The vertically growing clouds are unstable and intensely hot, he said, noting that “they are dangerous on

multiple fronts, mainly because there’s potential that you could see lightning develop underneath the fire, and that in itself could spark new fires.”

Lightning played a huge role in the state’s recordbrea­king fire season last year, and wildfire experts have said that similar patterns could play out in 2021 if conditions repeat themselves.

“You definitely would not want to find yourself near one of these,” Rowe said of the cloud.

But that’s precisely what fire crews are up against, said Rick Carhart, a spokesman for Cal Fire’s Butte County unit.

“The last two days, we’ve had some pretty significan­t weather,” Carhart said. “That [cloud] caused some extreme fire activity, which basically made our firefighte­rs back off from what they were doing until the weather calmed down.”

Firefighte­rs have done a good job of steering the flames away from the site of the 2018 Camp fire, which ravaged the nearby town of Paradise, he said. But it is now moving in the direction of Lake Almanor, where there are other homes and cabins.

Evacuation orders across portions of Butte and Plumas counties remained in place Tuesday, officials said.

Crews are working against steep slopes and nearly impassable terrain, Carhart said, especially since the fire is far from roads that would allow easy access with engines and hoses.

“In this case, we’re hiking miles in and doing a lot of the work with tools instead of water because we can’t even get water in there in some of these places,” he said.

And as the fire continues to expand, an increasing number of personnel are turning their focus to the aggressive blaze.

“We are still bringing in more resources,” Carhart said, “because this thing just keeps growing on us.”

Meanwhile, the Tamarack fire near the California­Nevada border in Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest ballooned in size overnight, from 23,000 acres to nearly 40,000 Tuesday morning with 0% containmen­t, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

The aggressive, lightning-sparked fire spurred mandatory evacuation orders from Markleevil­le to Mesa Vista, with the Alpine County Sheriff ’s Office posting on Facebook that officials had no electricit­y and were doing their best to get informatio­n out to threatened residents.

More than half of the county’s residents remained without power Tuesday, officials said, even as the California Department of Transporta­tion closed State Highway 88 from Picketts Junction to the Nevada state line because of the fire.

The fire is expanding with such force that it, too, is beginning to generate its own weather, fire incident spokeswoma­n Tracy LeClair said. On Tuesday morning, a large pyrocumulo­nimbus cloud could be seen forming over the blaze.

“As the heat from the fire builds, that heat rises, and it begins to suck the surroundin­g air up with it,” LeClair said, “and then all of that lofts upward. That’s when you start to see these clouds.”

Smoke from the fire has also darkened the skies in the nearby South Lake Tahoe area, while Markleevil­le on Tuesday morning had an “unhealthy” air quality reading of nearly 200, according to AirNow.Gov, the EPA air monitoring site.

The smoke is posing a challenge, said DeFries, the Tamarack fire incident spokesman, as it is making air operations and accurate mapping difficult.

More than 1,000 firefighte­rs are battling the flames, but, as in the Dixie fire, many are contending with steep, rocky terrain at elevations as high as 7,000 feet.

Crews on Tuesday were prioritizi­ng the fire’s northeast corner in an attempt to keep the blaze west of Highway 395 and away from homes and structures, he said.

But firefighte­r safety is also a concern, DeFries said, as the erratic flames meet “super-dry” piñon-juniper woodlands and hotly combustibl­e grasses.

“A lot of the terrain is not in a location where you can necessaril­y send in groups of firefighte­rs to try and create traditiona­l lines,” he said. “You’ve basically got to fight it where you can.”

 ?? Payton Bruni AFP/Getty Images ?? A SO-CALLED fire cloud billows into the sky near a fire camp in Bly in southern Oregon. The Bootleg fire absorbed a smaller blaze to become the largest wildfire burning in the country right now — so big that it has created its own lightning.
Payton Bruni AFP/Getty Images A SO-CALLED fire cloud billows into the sky near a fire camp in Bly in southern Oregon. The Bootleg fire absorbed a smaller blaze to become the largest wildfire burning in the country right now — so big that it has created its own lightning.
 ?? JESSICA BELL Noah Berger Associated Press ?? takes video of the Dixie fire along Highway 70 in Plumas National Forest. California is outpacing last year’s fire season as climate change has made blazes spread faster and terrain burn more quickly.
JESSICA BELL Noah Berger Associated Press takes video of the Dixie fire along Highway 70 in Plumas National Forest. California is outpacing last year’s fire season as climate change has made blazes spread faster and terrain burn more quickly.

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