May 19, 2024

Raging wildfires, extreme heat forecasts prompt evacuations in Northern California | CBC News

Flames threatening campgrounds and cabins prompted evacuations and closed off a swath of Northern California forest as the state headed into another weekend of dry, scorching weather and the continuing threat of wildfires.

Hundreds of firefighters aided by aircraft were fighting the Beckwourth Complex, two blazes sparked by lightning that were carving their way through the eastern edge of the million-acre Plumas National Forest in the northern Sierra Nevada near the Nevada state line.

Campgrounds and homes around Frenchman Lake were under evacuation orders Friday and a nearly 518-square-kilometre area of the forest was closed because of the danger, fire information officer Pandora Valle said.

After a day and night of explosive growth, the fire covered more than 98 square kilometres at midmorning Friday, causing containment to drop to 11 per cent.

The flames were burning through pine, fir and chaparral turned bone-dry by low humidity and high temperatures, while ridgetop winds and afternoon gusts of up to 56 km/h were “really pushing” the flames at times, Valle said.

The flames were burning through vegetation that had turned bone-dry by low humidity and high temperatures, officials said. (Noah Berger/The Associated Press)

The fire was one of many burning in the north, where several other large blazes destroyed dozens of homes in recent days.

In the region between the Oregon border and the northern end of the Central Valley, the big Lava and Tennant fires were significantly contained, and progress was reported at the Salt fire as containment improved to 45 per cent.

The Salt fire has burned 27 homes and 14 outbuildings north of Redding, which hit 37.7 C before 11 a.m. The Lava fire destroyed 20 structures, including 13 homes, and damaged two structures. The Tennant fire destroyed five buildings, including two homes.

In north-central Arizona, increased humidity slowed a big wildfire that posed a threat to the rural community of Crown King. The 63.5-square-kilometre lightning-caused fire in Yavapai County was 29 per cent contained. Recent rains allowed five national forests and state land managers to lift public-access closures.

In Oregon, the size of a wildfire burning near Klamath Falls in the southern part of the state more than doubled overnight, the Statesman Journal reported. Officials said the fire now covers 155 square kilometres as of Friday morning.

Hundreds of firefighters aided by aircraft were fighting the Beckwourth Complex, two blazes sparked by lightning that were carving their way through the eastern edge of the million-acre Plumas National Forest in the northern Sierra Nevada near the Nevada state line. (Noah Berger/The Associated Press)

In Idaho, Gov. Brad Little declared a wildfire emergency in the state Friday and mobilized the Idaho National Guard to help fight fires that had sparked across the state after lightning storms swept across the drought-stricken region.

Fire crews in north-central Idaho were facing extreme fire conditions and gusty winds as they fought two wildfires that threatened homes and forced evacuations in the remote and tiny community of Dixie about 64 kilometres southeast of Grangeville.

Efforts were complicated in part because firefighting resources were stretched thin, fire managers said, and in part because the area has very challenging terrain covered with trees and plants dry from the ongoing drought.

The fires near Dixie, covering a combined 50.5 square kilometres, were among several that started after lighting storms swept through the region earlier this week.

Meanwhile, forecasters warned that much of California will see dangerously hot weekend weather, with high temperature likely in the Central Valley, mountains, deserts and other inland areas because of strengthening high pressure over the state. Heat warnings did not include major coastal populations.

Death Valley could reach a staggering 54 C, the National Weather Service said.

California’s power grid operator issued a statewide flex alert from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday to avoid disruptions and rolling blackouts.

Flex alerts call for consumers to voluntarily conserve electricity by reducing the use of appliances and keeping the thermostat higher during evening hours when solar energy is diminished or no longer available.

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