As Barbie said, it's a good news/bad news kind of day.
The good news:As Velda said on another thread, it looks like we dodged the bullet on the last wind event - no further major fires got started, those that are still burning were not drastically affected.
Now the bad news:From tonight (October 19) at 11:00 p.m., it's looking like we are going to have another series of wind events.
1. PG&E (our electric utility company) is contemplating electric shut-offs, again, for upwards of 50,000 customers.
2. Red flag warning from tonight at 11:00 p.m. until October 21 at 8:00 a.m.: (from weather.gov, the U. S. Government National Weather Service web site):
"...Critical Fire Weather Conditions Expected Late Tonight Through
Early Wednesday Morning with Gusty Winds and Low Humidity..."3. Fire Weather Watch in effect from October 21 (Wednesday), 10:00 PM PDT until October 23, (Friday) 05:00 PM PDT
So it looks like Californians will be under critical fire weather conditions from tonight until Friday, although it looks like the temperatures are finally trending down. High near 70 on Saturday, high near 67 on Sunday. Cooler temps are always good during critical fire weather.
Now for the REALLY bad news: It is looking more and more likely that northern California will not receive any measurable rain for the entire month of October. I'm looking at the weather outlook for my area all the way up to to October 26. Not a drop in sight. "Sunny and warm" is the forecast for October 26, at least at the moment.
October is the month our annual rains have
always begun in the past - usually just light rains during the month, but we can also have a soaker in October. Maybe not this year. . . And just because the temps are trending down, doesn't mean we still can't have a few more 100 degree days.
Even taking wildfire out of the picture, this is very,
very worrisome. Our annual rains are ultimately where
all of California's water comes from - for industry, farming, drinking, household use, the works. You name it.
No rain = no water.
Man, I hope I am majorly wrong on this, and that things drastically change before the end of the month.
But I'm starting to think about the "D" word here.
Things are so dry here that even a totally mundane thing like, maybe, a steel rim from a flat tire scraping along the pavement throwing sparks has a powerful potential to start a major conflagration.
Think I'm exaggerating?
No. Not so much.
That's how the Carr fire started near Redding a couple of years ago (2018): 229,651 acres burned, at a cost of $1.659 billion. 7 fatalities, including a grandmother and her two grandchildren - the grandmother did not have a vehicle, so was unable to evacuate.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carr_Fire"Coincidental to the name of the incident, the fire was started when a flat tire on a vehicle caused the wheel's rim to scrape against the asphalt, creating sparks that set off the fire."Please pray for rain. I know I am.
Thanks.
Anne