Fire Update November 12, 2018 at 7:18 a.m.
The Camp Fire of Paradise, Ca. is now officially the worst California fire in state history (and California has quite a list of them), in terms of destruction. At 29 fatalities, the Camp Fire now equals the record number of fatalities of any California fire. It is possible for this number to increase, as inspectors are able to get into, and to assess, the burned area.
As Velda mentioned (thank you, Velda!), it has now been 210 days since our area of Northern California has received at least 1/2 inch of rain, with 100 plus degree temps during much of that time.
I have been trying to think of an analogy to try to illustrate how extremely dried out our wildlands are here, and why things burn so quickly, and I have come up with this:
Imagine your fresh-cut Christmas Tree (apologies for those of you who do not celebrate Christmas) standing in your living room from maybe after Thanksgiving, on through the summer - imagine how dried-out, dangerous and flammable it would be after many months of just standing there. It would take just a tiny spark - maybe even just a spark from ambient static electricity - to send this tree into such flame that it would consume your house in a matter of minutes.
Now image a hillside, or a mountain, or maybe a mountain range - or maybe even an entire region - covered by such trees. Then think of a spark, maybe from just one falling rock hitting another. Or a hawk causing a short by landing on power lines, causing sparks to fall into the dry brush below (the hawk incident is a verified incident). Thus a massive wildfire begins.
One begins to get the picture.
Update (from the CalFire Website and also from Yubanet website).
Current Size (acres): 128,798 [My Note: up nearly 14,000 additional acres overnight]
Percent Contained: 25%
Estimate of Containment: Nov. 30, 2018 [My Note: Again, nearly three weeks from now. Again, "Containment" does not mean that the fire is fully put out, it only means that the fire is fully surrounded by firefighters and fire breaks, thus it is "contained". Even when a fire is fully "contained" the interior of the "contained" area can still be quite actively burning. Sometimes for many weeks.
New: If a major wind event then occurs over a "contained" area, it is possible for the fire to escape containment and again spread]Personnel: 4,555 [My Note: up nearly 500 additional personnel from yesterday - the number of personnel fighting this fire is about the size of many small towns across the United States. The logistics of feeding/housing/water/showering etc. this number of people is staggering. Keep in mind that fighting fire is a very dirty business]
Structures Destroyed: 6,713 [estimate]
Expected full containment: 11/30/18 [nearly 3 weeks from now!]
Civilian fatalities: 29 [My Note: Up six from yesterday. More fatalities are possible, as fire crews are finally able to get into the burned area to do inspections. Immediately after a fire, and sometimes for many days afterward, it is unsafe to enter a burned-over area due to remaining fire heat, still-smoldering structures, toxic smoke from burned homes, downed power lines, flame-venting broken gas lines, etc.]
Structures still threatened: 15,000 [fifteen thousand - no available update from yesterday]
Commercial buildings destroyed: 260 [no available update from yesterday]
Single residences destroyed: 6,453 [six-thousand, four hundred fifty-three - no change from yesterday]
Engines: 512 [no available update from yesterday]
Water Tenders: 33 [no available update from yesterday]
Helicopters: 23 [no available update from yesterday]
Hand Crews: 85 [no available update from yesterday]
Dozers: 79 [no available update from yesterday]
Winds here at my house are currently calm, although it was windy here overnight. The heavy smoke overcast has returned to my area, looking outside this morning it is darker than it should be at this time of day (almost like before a major rainstorm), with visible smoke hanging in the air. Visibility probably less than 1/4 mile, due to the hanging smoke. Smell of smoke quite strong.
The map on the YubaNet.com website shows that the fire has now jumped over the upper reaches of Lake Oroville, which gives it a clear path towards the city of Oroville (a city of some size, just below Oroville Dam).
https://yubanet.com/Fires/camp/Thankfully, the winds are predicted to diminish, so Oroville does not appear to be in any immediate danger.
However, according to a map on this page (you will need to scroll down to the map, then "push" the map around so that is shows the fire area)
https://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/fires/article216106390.htmlThis map has tools that allows one to measure distances from the fire, this map suggests that the fire is currently burning only about 8 (eight) miles north of Oroville.
Unfortunately, the map on YubaNet also shows the town of Cherokee (that I mentioned in my post yesterday) to now be under the flames. I have many friends there, and have gone there to visit quite often. I hope this map is incorrect. I did hear from one of my friends via email that everyone was out (meaning evacuated) and safe.
If the homes of my friends have burned, when it is safe to do so (and when the roads in the area are again open, currently most are closed due to the fire) I shall go up there and do what I can to help, as little as it might be.
Wildfire is a truly dreadful thing. For those of us who live here, particularly those who live (or have lived, as I have) in a beautiful rural wildlands area, the constant - and real - threat of summer wildfire is never far from our thoughts.
Thank you.
Anne