Miami Herald (Sunday)

California wildfire advances as heat wave blankets West

- Associated Press

BECKWOURTH, CALIF.

Firefighte­rs struggled to contain an exploding Northern California wildfire under blazing temperatur­es as another heat wave hits the U.S. West this weekend, prompting an excessive heat warning for inland and desert areas.

On Friday, Death Valley National Park in California recorded a staggering high of 130 degrees Fahrenheit and could reach the same high on Saturday. If verified, the 130-degree reading would be the hottest high recorded there since July 1913, when the same Furnace Creek desert area hit 134 F, considered the highest reliably measured temperatur­e on Earth.

The Beckwourth Complex — a merging of two lightning-caused fires — showed no sign of slowing its rush northeast from the Sierra Nevada forest region after doubling in size only a few days earlier.

California’s northern mountain areas already have seen several large fires that have destroyed more than a dozen homes.

There were no confirmed reports of building damage, the fire prompted evacuation orders or warnings for roughly 2,800 people in California along with the closure of nearly 200 square miles of Plumas National Forest.

On Friday, ridgetop winds up to 20 mph combined with ferocious heat as the fire raged through dry pine, fir and chaparral. As the fire’s northeaste­rn flank raged near the California-Nevada state line, the Washoe County Sheriff’s Office asked people to evacuate some areas in the rural communitie­s of

Ranch Haven and Flanagan Flats, north of Reno.

The evacuation orders were lifted Saturday, but authoritie­s urged residents to be ready to leave if the fire becomes a threat again.

Hot rising air formed a gigantic, smoky pyrocumulu­s cloud that reached thousands of feet high and created its own lightning, fire informatio­n officer Lisa Cox said.

Spot fires caused by embers leapt up to a mile ahead of the northeaste­rn flank — too far for firefighte­rs to safely battle, and winds funneled the fire up draws and canyons full of dry fuel, where “it can actually pick up speed,”

Cox said.

Firefighte­rs usually take advantage of cooler, more humid nights to advance on a fire, Cox said, but the daytime conditions persisted. More than 1,200 firefighte­rs were aided by aircraft but the blaze was expected to continue forging ahead because of the heat and low humidity that dried out vegetation.

The air was so dry that some of the water dropped by aircraft evaporated before reaching the ground, she added.

The National Weather Service warned the dangerous conditions could cause heat-related illnesses, while California’s power grid operator issued a statewide Flex Alert from 4 to 9 p.m. Saturday to avoid disruption­s and rolling blackouts.

The call for voluntary conservati­on of electricit­y was extended for a second day, not only because of mounting heat, but because a wildfire in southern Oregon was threatenin­g transmissi­on lines that carry power to California.

 ?? NOAH BERGER AP ?? Firefighte­rs from Cal Fire’s Placervill­e station monitor the Sugar Fire, part of the Beckwourth Complex Fire, in Doyle, California, on Friday.
NOAH BERGER AP Firefighte­rs from Cal Fire’s Placervill­e station monitor the Sugar Fire, part of the Beckwourth Complex Fire, in Doyle, California, on Friday.

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