A few more major fires have popped up here in California over the last few days, one of them is burning around (perhaps actually in) the small Alpine county town of Markleeville (near where the earthquake of a few days ago was centered - currently 21,000 acres with zero containment):
https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2021/07/17/tamarack-fires-wall-of-flames-closing-in-on-markleeville/
Tamarack Fire, Alpine County & Markleeville, Ca.
According to this link, Markleeville has already been evacuated. Reportedly, this fire was ignited by lightning on July 4th. Often lightning strikes will smolder for a bit before they get going.
And then, now this from the United States National Weather Service, below. Widespread thunderstorms with abundant lightning - and with little to no rain - is about as bad as a summer weather forecast gets out here.
URGENT - FIRE WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service Sacramento CA
229 PM PDT Sat Jul 17 2021
...Thunderstorms with Abundant Lightning and Little Rainfall
Sunday through Monday...
Monsoonal moisture moving up from the south will bring the
potential for thunderstorms with abundant lightning and little
rainfall across portions of interior northern California Sunday
through Monday. Thunderstorms may develop Sunday afternoon over
the Sierra south of I-80, then spread northward into portions of
the Coastal Range, the southern Cascades and the northern Sierra
north of I-80 overnight. Isolated thunderstorms may also develop
in the Valley. Best thunderstorm potential will be over the
mountains. Given critically dry fuels, any lightning strikes may
result in high probability of [fire] ignition.
https://forecast.weather.gov/showsigwx.php?warnzone=CAZ016&warncounty=CAC101&firewxzone=CAZ216&local_place1=Yuba%20City%20CA&product1=Fire+Weather+Watch&lat=39.1409&lon=-121.6199#.YPOGgkBlBIA
Hold on to your socks. This isn't going to be pretty. And our worst fire month is generally October. . . early November our first rains. Only four months to go.
A lightning-strike weather band hitting south of Interstate 80 in the bone-dry Sierra spreading northward to the equally bone-dry southern Cascades is very bad news indeed.
Anne