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California firefighters chase new fires ignited by lightning

by Mary Sewell

SAN FRANCISCO — Firefighters scrambled Friday to quash fires ignited by lightning as thunderstorms with mostly small but welcome amounts of rain rumbled across drought-stricken Northern California, where forests have been burning for weeks. Firefighters were diverted from the massive Caldor Fire south of Lake Tahoe to fight multiple overnight lightning fires throughout El Dorado County, according to the local unit of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. The largest of those fires erupted in heavy brush in the steep terrain of Kanaka Valley. Rain from the storm cell helped firefighters, and the fire’s spread was stopped at less than 7 acres (2.8 hectares), Cal Fire said.

Another fire believed to have been sparked by lightning was burning in Mendocino County, north of San Francisco Bay. The Press Democrat reported it covered 8 acres (3.2 hectares) Friday morning. Lightning blitzes can have disastrous outcomes in parched California. Last year’s record amount of land burned included massive Northern California fires ignited when remnants of a tropical storm unleashed thousands of bolts. A cluster of 2020 lightning fires known as the August Complex burned more than 1,615 square miles (4,182 square kilometers) and is the largest California wildfire on record. The National Weather Service said more than 1,100 cloud-to-ground lightning strikes in California between Thursday evening and Friday morning, including 110 in the Bay Area. Cloud-to-cloud flashes were too numerous to count.

Rainfall from the thunderstorms was no drought-buster but was welcome anyway. The weather service said that the official downtown San Francisco rain gauge recorded 0.01 inches (0.25 millimeters) of rain by 5 a.m., marking the first time it has rained there on September 10 since 1978. The most recent measurable September rain in the city happened in 2019. Sacramento Executive Airport received 0.05 inches (1.27 millimeters) of rain in the Central Valley by 8 a.m. The last time that much rain fell was 175 days earlier, on March 18, the weather service said.

Thunderstorms with downpours also moved through parts of Southern California on Thursday and early Friday, triggering flash flood concerns for burn scars of past wildfires. According to state agencies, the threat of new lightning-sparked fires came as more than 13,000 firefightersworkedg to rein in 13 significant fires. The Caldor Fire, the 15th-largest in state history, was 53% contained after burning more than 341 square miles (883 square kilometers) and destroying more than 1,000 structures, including hundreds of homes. More than 12,700 residents were still waiting to return to evacuated homes.

In the northern Sierra Nevada and the southern Cascades, the Dixie Fire covered more than 1,485 square miles (3,846 square kilometers). Second in size to the August Complex, it has destroyed more than 1,300 structures. Cal Fire, meanwhile, announced that a fire that killed 142 facilities in the Sierra last month was human-caused but that investigators were still working on details. The River Fire began on August 4 in a Placer County campground and burned 4 square miles (10.4 sq.km.) before it was contained on August 13.

Historic drought and recent heatwaves tied to climate change have made wildfires harder to fight in the American West. Scientists say climate change has made the region much warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructive. President Joe Biden will survey fire damage during a visit to California next week. He will also campaign for Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who faces a recall election on Tuesday.

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