SoCalGalcas wrote:Thanks Velda for that info. It is frustrating being so out of touch. I will take any info anyone has. Lyn
A few good places to find fire news:
Yuba Net
https://yubanet.com/Fires/ (excellent source of information on the fires in the northern Sacramento valley surrounding foothills)
Cal Fire (official California government website)
http://www.fire.ca.gov/current_incidentsKCRA channel (Sacramento NBC television affiliate. News programs streamed online)
http://www.kcra.com/nowcastA terrible, unprecedented situation going on here in California.
I am often asked why bad wildfire seems to occur here in California every year. One of the main reasons probably is the climate, which seems to be getting hotter and drier (climate change, anyone?).
Summer temperatures in California's Central Valley where I live (near Sacramento - it's not the desert here, folks) can (and do) reach 115 degrees - or more (not a typo - I'll write it out. One hundred fifteen degrees F). This summer was the hottest I can remember in my forty years of living in the area. From early June until just recently, in October, daily high temperatures were consistently 100+ (many many days of 112 to 115 degrees). Add to that the fact that the foothills around all of the California valleys (California is
not flat! Not even close! California is mostly mountains, foothills and valleys) are covered with highly flammable grass, trees and brush.
Add to that the "icing on the cake": California receives NO appreciable rain (in many/most areas of California this means exactly
NONE) from early April until (these days) often late November.
Then, in October, before the rain, the seasonal high winds that you are reading about begin to gust.
Heat + No Rain + Dry Fuels + Wind = Disaster
Something so simple as, say, a tire chain that might come loose on a school bus and drag on the pavement creating sparks, can ignite a major conflagration in these kinds of conditions.
When I first moved to the northern California foothills in about 1977, the first hard freeze came mid-September and it wasn't unusual to see a bit of snow by the end of September. These days the first hard freeze generally doesn't come to the foothills until sometime in December or January. Or later. Snow often not at all.
Anne