ALERT California braces for power shutoffs and warm, windy weekend

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Here we go again....

Posted for fair use.....

California braces for power shutoffs and warm, windy weekend

By DAISY NGUYEN
2 hours ago

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Firefighters and officials at California’s largest utility company braced for hot, dry and windy weather in northern and central areas of the state this weekend that may fan the flames of several major wildfires or ignite new ones.

Pacific Gas & Electric warned Friday it may cut power from Sunday morning to Monday, potentially affecting 97,000 customers in 16 counties, during which forecasters said a ridge of high pressure will raise temperatures and generate gusts flowing from the interior to the coast.

PG&E initially warned that approximately 21,000 customers in three counties would lose power beginning Saturday evening but expanded the potential shutoff when the forecast changed.

The utility is tracking the weather to determine if it would be necessary to shut off power to areas where gusts could damage the company’s equipment or hurl debris into lines that can ignite flammable vegetation.

When heavy winds were predicted earlier this month, PG&E cut power to about 167,000 homes and businesses in central and Northern California in a more targeted approach after being criticized last year for acting too broadly when it blacked out 2 million customers to prevent fires.

PG&E equipment has sparked past large wildfires, including the 2018 fire that destroyed much of the Sierra foothills town of Paradise and killed 85 people.

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Firefighters battling the state’s largest wildfire braced for the change in weather by constructing fuel breaks on Friday to keep the flames from reaching a marijuana-growing enclave where authorities said many of the locals have refused to evacuate and abandon their maturing crops.

The wildfire called the August Complex is nearing the small communities of Post Mountain and Trinity Pines, about 200 miles (322 kilometers) northwest of Sacramento, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Law enforcement officers went door to door warning of the encroaching fire danger but could not force residents to evacuate, Trinity County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Nate Trujillo said.

“It’s mainly growers,” Trujillo said. “And a lot of them, they don’t want to leave because that is their livelihood.”
As many as 1,000 people remained in Post Mountain and Trinity Pines, authorities and local residents estimated Thursday.

Numerous studies in recent years have linked bigger U.S. wildfires to global warming from the burning of coal, oil and gas, especially because climate change has made California much drier. A drier California means plants are more flammable.

The U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Region announced Friday that it is extending the closure of all nine national forests in California due to concerns including fire conditions and critical limitations on firefighting resources.

The threatened marijuana growing area is in the Emerald Triangle, a three-county corner of Northern California that by some estimates is the nation’s largest cannabis-producing region.

People familiar with Trinity Pines said the community has up to 40 legal farms, with more than 10 times that number in hidden, illegal growing areas.

Growers are wary of leaving the plants vulnerable to flames or thieves. Each farm has crops worth half a million dollars or more and many are within days or weeks of harvest.

One estimate put the value of the area’s legal marijuana crop at about $20 million.

“There (are) millions of dollars, millions and millions of dollars of marijuana out there,” Trujillo said. “Some of those plants are 16 feet (5 meters) tall, and they are all in the budding stages of growth right now.”

Gunfire in the region is common. A recent night brought what locals dubbed the “roll call” of cannabis cultivators shooting rounds from pistols and automatic weapons as warnings to outsiders, said Post Mountain volunteer Fire Chief Astrid Dobo, who also manages legal cannabis farms.

Hundreds of migrant workers typically pour into the area this time of year to help trim and harvest the plants, but it’s uncertain whether that population dwindled due to the coronavirus pandemic, said Julia Rubinic, a member of the Trinity County Agriculture Alliance, which represents licensed cannabis growers.

Mike McMillan, spokesman for the federal incident command team managing the northern section of the August Complex, said fire officials plan to deliver a clear message that ”we are not going to die to save people. That is not our job.”

“We are going to knock door to door and tell them once again,” McMillan said. “However, if they choose to stay and if the fire situation becomes, as we say, very dynamic and very dangerous … we are not going to risk our lives.”

A firefighter was killed and another was injured on Aug. 31 while working on the fire. Diana Jones, a volunteer firefighter from Texas, was among 26 people who have died since more than two dozen major wildfires broke out across the state last month.

A memorial service was held Friday for a veteran firefighter, Charles Morton, 39, a squad boss with the Big Bear Interagency Hotshot Crew who died Sept. 17 while battling the El Dorado Fire in the San Bernardino National Forest east of Los Angeles.

Full Coverage: Wildfires

“I know that Charlie was a very skilled, in fact extraordinary, firefighter and a fire leader,” U.S. Forest Service Chief Vicki Christiansen told the gathering at The Rock Church in San Bernardino.

“He committed himself, often for weeks and months on end, to protecting lives, communities and natural resources all around this country in service to fellow Americans.”

The Butte County Sheriff’s Office on Friday released the identity of another of the 15 people killed in a rampaging forest fire earlier this month. The remains of Linda Longenbach, 71, of Berry Creek, were found on Sept. 10 in a roadway about 10 feet from an ATV, close to the body of a man previously identified as Paul Winer, 68.

A relative told investigators the victims were aware of the fire and chose not to evacuate.
____
Associated Press writer John Antczak in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
 

kittyluvr

Veteran Member
Learn the role weather plays in a power shutoff

If weather forecasts indicate gusty winds and dry conditions, combined with a heightened fire risk, it may be necessary for us to turn off the electricity serving that area. This is called a Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS). Learn more about a PSPS.


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IMPORTANT: This map does not reflect the most detailed and up to date information about announced Public Safety Power Shutoff events. For the latest information visit pge.com/pspsupdates.

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The information in this map is intended only to provide customers with a general estimate regarding potential locations that may be impacted by a PSPS event should one become necessary. Conditions affecting a possible PSPS event can change quickly and the actual impact of a future PSPS event is uncertain.

Find your PG&E Geographic Zone and 7-day key below.

Friday, September 25, 2020

NOTE: This forecast is based on weather conditions and fuel moisture content only and does not include other criteria used to determine whether a PSPS may be necessary.


PG&E Meteorology continues to closely monitor a dry offshore wind event that will begin to develop across Northern CA Saturday, will peak and spread south along the high Sierra Sunday evening, eventually reaching Southern CA divisions Sunday night into Monday. Winds will then decrease across the North Monday morning, while decreasing across the south Monday afternoon/evening. Some details may still evolve as the event draws closer, but currently sustained winds of 20 – 30 mph with gusts 45 – 55 mph are anticipated, with the highest gusts through the favored gaps.

These northerly winds will also coincide with very hot temperatures and the National Weather Service has issued a Red Flag Warnings and Fire Weather Watches for portions of Northern CA valid from Saturday evening through Monday. The Northern Operations Predictive Services has also forecast ”High Risk” for strong and dry offshore winds combined with dry surface fuels. Please refer to weather.gov, Northern California Geographic Area Coordination Center, or Southern California Geographic Area Coordination Center for the latest updates from federal forecast agencies. At this time PG&E Geographic Zones 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, and 9 are in PSPS Watch Sunday through Monday.

Details: Temperatures will remain near to slightly above normal today before a strong ridge of high pressure builds over California and results in a pronounced warming trend this weekend. Widespread triple digit heat is possible Sunday into Tuesday, including near the coast and in coastal valleys. Breezy offshore winds will begin to develop across the Northern Interior Saturday, and then will peak Sunday evening in the northern Sierra foothills. Strong easterly to southeast winds will then spread south along the Sierra into Southern Divisions Sunday night into Monday, with all winds expected to decrease through the day Monday. Peak gusts are expected to range between 45 – 55 mph Sunday evening, with the highest gusts expected to occur through favored gaps across the North.

Slightly cooler conditions are then possible near the coast during the middle of next week, but above normal temperatures look to continue through all of next week. Fire danger remains seasonably high as live fuel moisture values are at critical levels in the lower and middle elevations and dead fuel moisture values are at seasonal minimums. The latest National Interagency Fire Center wildland fire potential outlook favors above normal large wildland fire potential for most of Northern CA for September and October followed by normal large fire potential for November and December.

 

kittyluvr

Veteran Member
Part of the e-mail I received from PGE:


ESTIMATED SHUTOFF START:

Sunday, September 27th
4:00 PM - 6:00 PM​
Shutoff times may be delayed if winds arrive later than forecast.​
We expect weather to improve by
6:00 AM on Monday, September 28th​
After weather has improved, we will inspect equipment before restoring power.​


restoration
ESTIMATED RESTORATION:
Monday, September 28th by 6:00 PM
Restoration time may change depending on weather and equipment damage.​
 

jward

passin' thru
PG&E plans to cut power to 89,000 customers in 16 California counties due to weather causing fire risks

by: Los Angeles Times
Posted: Sep 26, 2020 / 10:15 PM PDT / Updated: Sep 26, 2020 / 10:15 PM PDT

A car drives passed a power station in Mill Valley during a Pacific Gas & Electric blackout on Oct. 10, 2019. (Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images)


A car drives passed a power station in Mill Valley during a Pacific Gas & Electric blackout on Oct. 10, 2019. (Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty Images)


Pacific Gas & Electric plans to cut power to 89,000 customers in parts of 16 counties beginning early Sunday as dry, unseasonably hot conditions and strong winds continue to increase fire danger across much of Northern California, officials announced Saturday evening.
Related Content

The shut-off will be in three phases and last until late Monday, officials said. The first phase will begin at 2 a.m. Sunday and include about 15,000 customers in Butte, Plumas, Shasta and Tehama counties.
The second phase will begin at 4 p.m. and include 74,000 customers in Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, El Dorado, Lake, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sierra, Sonoma, Yuba and Mooretown Rancheria.


Fifteen customers in Kern County will be affected in the third phase around 8 p.m.
Read the full story at LATimes.com.

 

Sooth

Veteran Member
These liberal Democrat fools have turned one of the best and most beautiful states in the nation into a third world dump.
Liberal Democrats/Marxist/Communists destroy and murder everything they touch. They want absolute power no matter who or what they need to destroy to achieve that end. And absolute does not mean absolute because whatever they have, whatever they control is never enough. Never. When they smile and say, oh, we have what we want now. Everything’s fine. Let there be peace and harmony. They lie. They will still be smiling when they kill you and yours.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
how do powerlines cause fires?
PGE doesn't do line/right-of-way maintenance because of all the tree hugger laws and pure dereliction. Dry trees and brush bouncing off or falling on hot lines cause fires. Cali has explosive fire conditions every fall....and HAS for at least hundreds of thousands of years. Anywho...bad combination.
 

Knight_Loring

Veteran Member
PGE doesn't do line/right-of-way maintenance because of all the tree hugger laws and pure dereliction. Dry trees and brush bouncing off or falling on hot lines cause fires. Cali has explosive fire conditions every fall....and HAS for at least hundreds of thousands of years. Anywho...bad combination.

To add to this; Warm / hot weather brings more demand from electric customers which means more power in the form of MegaWatts flowing through the power lines. Simply put, MegaWatts are a combination of Volts and Current.
Current is heat. Heat causes the power lines to sag. More current = more line sag. Line sag is engineered and managed by the system operators.

Right of ways under and near the power lines are supposed to be managed and kept cut so when line sag happens, the lines don't approach the vegetation. Different classes of voltage power lines have what is referred to as minimum approach distances, meaning lets say a 230,000 volt line has a M-A-D of 5 feet 6 inches. Due to the magnetism of the line, any thing that gets within that 5 feet 6 inches, could cause the line to ark to it...like a lightning bolt.

If the vegetation is not managed and is allowed to grow under the power lines, during even normal operation with normal line sag, arks and sparks will happen causing fires.

For whatever reasons, Commiefornia will not allow the power companies to manage the vegetation under the lines.

You get what you vote for!
 

jward

passin' thru
World News
September 27, 20205:04 PMUpdated 2 hours ago

California wine country wildfire forces evacuation of hospital, hundreds of homes

By Stephen Lam
4 Min Read

ST. HELENA, Calif. (Reuters) - A wind-driven wildfire erupted on Sunday in the heart of northern California’s Napa Valley wine country and spread across more than 1,000 acres (404 hectares), forcing the evacuation of several hundreds homes and a hospital, authorities said.

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Slideshow ( 5 images )
The blaze, dubbed the Glass Fire, broke out before dawn near Calistoga, about 75 miles (120 km) north of San Francisco, and raced toward the adjacent towns of Deer Park and St. Helena, with flames advancing to within a mile of the Adventist Health St. Helena hospital.

The fire’s cause was under investigation.
All 55 patients who were at the hospital at the time were safely evacuated by ambulance and helicopter over the course of five hours, beginning around 7 a.m. in the morning, hospital spokeswoman Linda Williams told Reuters.

“We had ambulances lined up from all over the Bay area,” she said, adding that while the facility was surrounded by smoke, the skies over the hospital itself remained clear enough for helicopters to land and take off with patients who needed to be evacuated by air.
She said it was the second wildfire-related evacuation of the 151-bed hospital in about a month, coming on the heels of a massive cluster of lightning-sparked blazes that swept several counties north of the San Francisco Bay region.


Evacuation orders also were posted on Sunday for Deer Park and several other Napa County communities, according to California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) spokesman Tyree Zander.
Some 600 homes were under evacuation orders, with residents of roughly another 1,400 dwellings warned to be ready to flee at a moment’s notice. About 5,000 people in all were affected by evacuation notices, he said.

By 1:30 p.m., flames stoked by winds gusting up to 50 miles per hour (80 kph) had scorched some 1,200 acres (485 hectares) of grassy rolling hillsides and oak woodlands, with zero percent containment, Zander said.
There were no immediate reports of injuries, but a Reuters photographer in St. Helena saw a number of structures that had been burned.

The Napa Valley, world renowned as one of California’s premiere wine-producing regions, has been plagued by a series of wildfire outbreaks in and around the Bay area over the past several years.
The latest came as the Pacific Gas and Electric Company announced it was temporarily shutting off power to transmission lines in portions of 16 counties across northern and central California as a precaution against heightened wildfire risks posed by hot, windy, dry conditions.

The public safety power shutoffs were expected to affect some 65,000 homes and businesses in the region, said PG&E, the state’s largest electric utility.
A red flag warning for extreme wildfire risks was to remain posted for Napa Valley through Monday morning, Zander said.
CalFire said a fire weather watch was due to go into effect on Monday across much of Southern California due to a forecast return of hot, gusty Santa Ana winds and low humidity from San Diego to Los Angeles and Ventura counties.

 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

Napa, Sonoma counties face multiple wildfires fueled by powerful winds

by: Los Angeles Times
Posted: Sep 27, 2020 / 01:34 PM PDT / Updated: Sep 27, 2020 / 11:22 PM PDT

Napa and Sonoma counties were under siege from several fires that raced through wine country Sunday, fueled by powerful winds that are sending flames into populated areas.


Numerous structures were burned Sunday night near the town of St. Helena in Napa County, and officials were worried as flames moved toward Sonoma County and Santa Rosa. This is the same region hit by historic fires in 2017 that destroyed thousands of homes and killed dozens.

Related Content


On Sunday night, Napa County officials expanded the mandatory evacuation zone to include a portion of the town of St. Helena on the southwestern side of Napa Valley, an area which includes a campus of the Culinary Institute of America, a renowned culinary college.


The evacuation order means that the hills on both sides of Napa Valley, flanking the towns of St. Helena and Calistoga, are threatened by fire. Farther southwest, Sonoma County officials ordered mandatory evacuations in the Mayacamas Mountains west of St. Helena and into the eastern fringes of the city of Santa Rosa, including the site of the Juvenile Justice Center on Rancho Los Guilicos Road.


Read the full story on LATimes.com.



Profile photo, opens profile page on Twitter in a new tab


Napa County Sheriff's Office

@NapaSheriff

Please take a moment to listen to our Hi-Lo Siren, which is different from our regular siren. The Hi-Lo Siren is used to inform the community of evacuations. Reminder, when you hear the Hi-Lo...it's time to go!



b4Q9rk-nmuOLuump.jpg






8:32 AM · Sep 27, 2020

216

152 people are Tweeting about this
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

California Wildfires

By April Hettinger

Published September 27, 2020 11:48 pm
Glass Fire rips through wine country

NAPA, Calif. (KYMA, KECY) - In California, a fast-moving wildfire forced homeowners in the heart of wine country to evacuate early Sunday.

Authorities in Napa County say the fire was first reported at about 4:00 in the morning.

That's when deputies raced through neighborhoods trying to alert people of the danger.

Fire crews have been using tankers and choppers to attack the fire from the air.

Thick smoke could be seen for miles.

Videos on social media showed a number of houses and structures burning.

The "Glass fire" as it's known now has already scorched nearly 1,000 acres in the area that is home to dozens of wineries.


California News / News
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

Nearly 50,000 facing evacuations as fires besiege California wine country
By Luke Money,
Anita Chabria, Hayley Smith, Rong-Gong Lin II

Sep. 28, 2020
9:01 AM

UPDATED2:47 PM

Another series of wildfires stormed California’s wine country overnight as flames destroyed numerous homes and other buildings in Napa and Sonoma counties and forced tens of thousands to flee.

The number of structures damaged or destroyed was unclear Monday, “but there was significant loss” in some areas, according to Santa Rosa Fire Chief Tony Gossner.

Almost 34,000 people have been ordered to evacuate, officials said, while more than 14,000 others have been warned that they, too, may have to leave.

A number of homes began to burn early Monday in the suburban eastern neighborhoods of Santa Rosa. The city of 177,000 residents, Sonoma County’s most populous, was devastated three years ago by the Tubbs fire, which was also driven by strong winds and destroyed about 1,500 homes in the 1980s-built northwestern Coffey Park neighborhood.

On Monday, it was the suburban northeastern neighborhoods of Santa Rosa that were burning, this time from the Shady fire.

Whipped by powerful, hot and dry Diablo winds coming from the north and east, which showered embers onto the city, the fire engulfed houses in the area of Mountain Hawk Drive, which is lined with two-story tract homes in the Skyhawk development, built in the late 1990s and early 2000s.




Chief Ben Nicholls with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said crews had contended with “explosive fire growth” that saw the flames “burn approximately four miles during the course of about six hours overnight.”

SANTA ROSA, CA - SEPTEMBER 27: Santa Rosa Fire Department Firefighters stand, watching the Shady Fire as it makes its way towards homes along Mountain Hawk Drive in Skyhawk Park on Sunday, Sept. 27, 2020 in Santa Rosa, CA. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

California

Photos: Napa and Sonoma counties under assault from Glass and Shady fires

Sep. 28, 2020

Officials are stressing the importance of following evacuation orders when they’re issued. Sonoma County Sheriff’s Sgt. Juan Valencia said some people refused to leave and later had to be rescued from their homes.

“Unfortunately, we did have some people that stayed behind,” he said during a briefing Monday.


Gov. Gavin Newsom also emphasized the point, saying “the dynamics of climate change, the dynamics as it relates to the lack of forest management over the last century, have created ... real concern as it relates to the spread of these wildfires in ferocious ways.

“We really, really cannot say it enough: Please heed local law enforcement,” he said Monday. “Please listen to them when they raise that alarm bell.”

Large swaths of Santa Rosa remain under mandatory evacuation orders. Districts in the city’s northeast were ordered to evacuate, including the neighborhoods of Skyhawk, Melita, Stonebridge and Pythian.

Evacuations also were ordered Monday for the Summerfield and Spring Lake areas, according to the Santa Rosa Police Department.


With flames in the distance, busloads of older people were evacuated from the Oakmont Gardens assisted-living community. Elsewhere in the city, cars jammed narrow roads as residents heeded evacuation orders.

Two other fires were also burning upwind of the fire encroaching on Santa Rosa, both of them flanking the town of St. Helena in Napa County: the Boysen fire to the west and the Glass fire to the north.

The Glass fire burned rapidly Sunday through Napa Valley’s famed Silverado Trail, known for its wineries. One building lost was the distinctive stone structure at the Chateau Boswell Winery, which marked its 40th anniversary last year.



Cal Fire has since grouped the Glass, Boysen and Shady fires together as the “Glass incident.” That combined conflagration had burned 11,000 acres as of Monday, with no containment, according to Cal Fire. It was threatening 8,543 structures.

Ash could be seen falling from the sky throughout the region.



In Napa County, mandatory evacuation zones were expanded to cover the hills on both sides of the northern Napa Valley, flanking the towns of St. Helena and Calistoga, as well as parts of the east side of the Silverado Trail.

A mandatory evacuation zone included the western portion of St. Helena, an area that includes single-family houses and a campus of the Culinary Institute of America, a renowned culinary college.


“Individuals who are seeking shelter are reminded to bring a face covering, practice good hygiene habits and adhere to physical distancing,” Napa County officials wrote in an evacuation update, underscoring the continued threat posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

A round of evacuations was ordered in Sonoma County on Monday, covering Trione-Annadel State Park and the area to the south, as well as north of Bennett Valley Road, west of Savannah Trail and east and south of the Santa Rosa city limits.

The three now-unified “Glass incident” fires were burning in an area that had not experienced a major burn in the last century, Matt Roberts, a doctoral student in atmospheric science at the University of Nevada at Reno, said in a tweet.

VACAVILLE, CA

California

‘No one is ready for it.’ Fleeing a raging fire amid the coronavirus pandemic

Aug. 19, 2020

Monday morning brought a too-familiar sight in Sonoma County: The sun turned into a smoke-shrouded red disk in the sky.

The capricious nature of the fire was evident in the Skyview neighborhood, which had been hit by heavy embers the night before.

With sweeping views of the nearby hills, most of the community’s million-dollar homes remained intact. But a stretch near the top of a hill was dotted with some that had burned to ash.

Firefighters worked to douse one green stucco house that was still aflame. Its second story had collapsed into its three-car garage.


As he stood in front of his house in Spring Lake — a neighborhood of cul-de-sacs and mature oaks nestled against the hills of Trione-Annadel State Park — Mat Tamba watched a fresh plume of smoke rising over a ridge.

“That’s the new something I just saw,” he said, worried.

His son, Tyler, 9, daughter, Matison, 4, and wife, Noelle, had evacuated to his in-laws’ house Sunday night, but he returned Monday morning to gather more things — toiletries, a Minnie Mouse stuffed doll.

Tamba recalled how during the 2017 Tubbs fire, his in-laws lost their home in a nearby neighborhood. On Sunday night, when propane tanks began to explode nearby, he knew the situation was serious.


“That’s the sign it’s getting to the houses,” he said.

Continued.....
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Continued......

Around the corner, Marilyn Heller had already taken the advice of the Santa Rosa Fire Department and put the propane tanks from her grill on the sidewalk in front of her driveway. Like Tamba, Heller, 72, was packing up her car to get out.

She and her husband, Robert, have lived in their ranch-style house since 1974. Now, everything sentimental — including hand-me-downs from her grandmother and aunt — was packed up in dozens of boxes. As Heller kicked at burned leaves and embers in the gutter, she said she and her husband had discussed staying Sunday night until they saw flames. Her son, a former Marine, had purchased them special heat-resistant straws in case they needed to jump in the pool to survive. But she didn’t “want to be in the way of the Fire Department.”

Not far away, Ben Lilia, 30, was hosing down his yard and had a sprinkler going on the grass. He said he didn’t intend to leave until he saw flames. He owns a water truck, originally purchased to fill pools, but it has seen more fire action in recent years.


“I don’t think it will reach this far,” he said of the current fire, noting that the wind had given way to a heavy stillness, broken only by the hum of the generator he purchased last year after planned electricity cutoffs left him in the dark.

Despite the risks, Lilia said this is a neighborhood he loves.

“It’s a good place besides the power outages and the fires,” he said.

Angwin resident James Burville evacuated his home at 5 a.m. Sunday after a power outage.


He went to his church in Calistoga — only to awaken the next morning to find that area being evacuated. After spending more than three hours in a registration line at the Napa County Evacuation Center, he is now hoping for a room and some rest.

Although the Tubbs fire came within 10 miles of his home, he said this experience felt worse.

“I may lose all my belongings,” he said, “and because we had no power, I missed taking my most important things with me.”

Burville had already been thinking about moving closer to his immediate family in Oregon, but the current situation, he said, made him want to move sooner.


Rincon Valley resident Randi Cornwall said her family was lucky to live in a small pocket of Santa Rosa that survived the 2017 Tubbs fire, the 2019 Kincade fire and the wildfires last month. But, she said, fear and bad memories remain.

“The Tubbs trauma is real,” Cornwall said. “When you have seen fire move fast before, you know to get the hell out before traffic backs up and fire is licking at your cars.”

SANTA ROSA, CA - SEPTEMBER 28: Firefighters battle the Shady Fire as it makes its way towards homes along Mountain Hawk Drive in Skyhawk Park on Monday, Sept. 28, 2020 in Santa Rosa, CA. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

California

Santa Rosa residents flee, hoping their homes survive as fire bears down

2 hours ago

With a full house — three school-age kids, distance learning because of the pandemic, as well as her mother and father, who were evacuated from Napa — the situation is bordering on overwhelming, she said. Ash has blanketed the area, and her family has air filters running in every room.


“My teens are now sending me homes on Zillow out of the area,” she said. “We are all in some form of therapy. My 6-year-old needs me to hold her when she smells smoke.”

As a fifth-generation Sonoma County resident, Cornwall says she feels deeply rooted in her community, and she struggles with the idea of leaving. But after seeing more than 20 of her friends lose their homes to fire — and so many others forced to evacuate — she is growing weary of living in a hyper-vigilant state.

“I don’t think I can overstate the exhaustion from it all,” Cornwall said. “And we are the incredibly lucky ones who haven’t lost our home.”

Three years ago, Jeff and Birgit Sengstack had to flee their home near Santa Rosa in the middle of the night as embers fell like rain. Their home of 18 years was ablaze two minutes after they pulled out of their driveway.


They spent three years rebuilding and finally moved back in July.

On Sunday, fire returned. From his porch, Jeff Sengstack said he could see flames shooting hundreds of feet into the sky.

“We were totally stressed out last night,” said Sengstack, 71, who is now semi-retired. “It was pretty much chest-tightening, headaches, worried about getting ready to leave, making preparations.”

On Monday, the couple’s hilltop home was one evacuation zone away from a neighborhood that had received an evacuation advisory. The fire was four miles away.


“You have to be confident,” Sengstack said. “It is unpredictable, but the winds are relatively calm right now. They are now posting fire crews all along the neighborhoods in Santa Rosa, and it appears to be generally paying off.”

SANTA ROSA, CA - SEPTEMBER 27: Santa Rosa Fire Department Firefighters stand, watching the Shady Fire as it makes its way towards homes along Mountain Hawk Drive in Skyhawk Park on Sunday, Sept. 27, 2020 in Santa Rosa, CA. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

California

How a narrow gap of land brought another fire nightmare to California wine country

Sep. 28, 2020

Wildfires are nothing new in wine country. The region has seen several significant blazes in recent years — including the Tubbs fire, Kincade fire and this year’s LNU Lightning Complex fire, which has burned more than 363,000 acres in Sonoma, Lake, Napa, Yolo and Solano counties.

That fire, the fourth-largest in recorded state history, has been blamed for five deaths. It was 98% contained as of Monday.


“My heart also aches for everyone who’s been displaced, who’s been injured, who’s been evacuated, who’s lost property,” U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson (D-St. Helena) said Monday. “It’s just one more year of the same thing, and it’s getting a little old.”

Because of the Diablo winds, much of Northern California is under a red flag warning, meaning the National Weather Service is highly confident there will be dangerous fire weather conditions.

LITTLE ROCK, CA - SEPTEMBER 26: Zenon Mayorga walks among bushes and Joshua tree covered in red fire retardant behind Alejandro Landa home in Juniper Hills on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020 in Little Rock, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

California

Extreme fire danger in Southern California amid new heat wave

44 minutes ago

Such windy conditions can easily loft embers into the air, where they travel and land downwind, igniting new spot fires.


The warning is in effect until 9 p.m. Monday, with forecasters predicting critically low humidity and wind gusts that could reach up to 50 mph at high elevations. The Bay Area is also under a heat advisory until 7 p.m. Monday.

Such weather conditions also present a challenge for crews working to wrangle existing fires.

In Butte County, where the deadly North Complex fire is still burning, the Sheriff’s Office issued an evacuation order Sunday night for Pulga, Concow, Big Bend and Yankee Hill, as well as an evacuation warning for the town of Paradise, which was mostly destroyed in the 2018 Camp fire that resulted in 85 deaths and the loss of more than 18,000 structures.

Shawnee Rickson, who has lived in Paradise her entire life, said her family’s home was one of the few left standing after the Camp fire swept through the town.


“Fires are now the scariest thing,” she said, noting that her family always keeps a “fire box” with important documents and pictures ready in case of evacuation.

“Unfortunately, it’s a normal thing that we are getting used to,” she said.

PARADISE, CALIFORNIA--NOV.14, 2018-- The Paradise High School Bobcats were supposed to start playoffs on Nov. 9. By then, almost the entire team was homeless. (Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times)

California

Paradise again threatened as deadly fires push toward towns gutted by 2018 inferno

Sep. 28, 2020

Strong winds were reported in Shasta County, where a fast-moving wildfire ignited Sunday afternoon near the rural community of Igo, about nine miles southwest of Redding. The blaze grew from 50 acres to 400 acres in about half an hour, according to Cal Fire, prompting evacuation orders and sending up a massive plume of smoke.


Named the Zogg fire, it had swelled to 15,000 acres by Monday morning and prompted numerous evacuations. The blaze is zero percent contained.

The latest rash of wildfires adds to what’s already been a historic and devastating fire season in California. So far this year, over 8,100 wildfires have ignited statewide — burning more than 3.7 million acres, killing 26 people and consuming over 7,000 structures.

Five of the six largest wildfires ever recorded in California have started since August and are still burning, according to Cal Fire.

Times staff writers Maura Dolan, Alex Wigglesworth and Kent Nishimura contributed to this report.
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
A new fire started this afternoon in Santa Clarita in S. Cal. Exploded to 200 acres in extreme wind conditions.
 
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