California has Australian problems now.
CalFire advised every citizen of the state — all 40 million of them — to be prepared to evacuate.
California is Australia now. Beginning late last year, in what is already known as Australia’s Black Summer, bushfires:
- burned through 46 million acres, or 72,000 square miles,
- killed several billion animals, pushing a number of species to extinction or the brink of it,
- flooded Sydney with air so thick with smoke ferries couldn’t navigate its harbor and fire alarms in office buildings rang out, registering the smoke as proof the building itself was in flame,
- forced beachfront evacuations in scenes that crossed Dunkirk with Mad Max.
The situation today in California isn’t yet quite as grim, although this week CalFire advised every citizen of the state — all 40 million of them — to be prepared to evacuate. Already, more than 100,000 already have.
When I first began writing this article, 500,000 acres had been burned in the state; when I finished writing it, the it was 600,000, and when it was done being edited, it was 700,000 — a number that would have been, in recent memory, a historically devastating year of fire.
Friday morning update: the same math this morning suggests that we're now approaching 700,000 acres in NorCal in past week, with 500,000 of these in the immediate vicinity of the San Francisco Bay Area. #CAwx #CAfire #LNULightingComplex #SCULightningComplex #CZULightningComplex https://t.co/DbI5ga5gUU
— Daniel Swain (@Weather_West) August 21, 2020
In just five days, more land had burned than in all of 2019. And the number kept growing—well past a million acres to 1.25 million.
So far, the fires in California have burned more in the past 5 days than in all of 2019.https://t.co/oDil6p9P1a https://t.co/TBj0fSLW4w
— Eric Holthaus (@EricHolthaus) August 20, 2020
In the Bay Area, the two Lightning Complex fires — in wildfire terminology, “complex” is when multiple blazes join forces — are now the second and third most destructive fires in the state’s history. The Complex could burn as many as a million acres, it’s been suggested — the state’s first “gigafire.”
Hate to say it but we might exceed 1 million acres in this fire siege. The sets of gigafires has arrived and it's an ignominious milestone. https://t.co/fyRlLR4TKJ
— Stuart Palley (@stuartpalley) August 21, 2020
The lightning storms that set it off simultaneously ignited so many other wildfires the state authorities couldn’t keep track of all of them, just the 376 most significant ones. All told, more than ten thousand lightning strikes were recorded in a single day; the week saw 560 wildfires start.
Latest updates on California's wildfires, per Cal Fire:
— Lizzie Johnson (@lizziejohnsonnn) August 21, 2020
– 12,000 firefighters at two dozen major blazes
– 560 new wildfires in the past week and 771,000 total acres burned
Big Basin Redwoods State Park has been burned through, prompting a conservation group to write, “We are devastated to report that Big Basin, as we have known it, loved it, and cherished it for generations, is gone.”
These trees are between 800 and 1,500 years old. Some of them, older than Muhammad, had stood for a thousand years by the time Europeans first set foot in North America. The youngest of them are older than the Black Death, and precede the invention of the printing press by centuries.
But the lamentations proved premature; reports immediately after the fire had them “scorched but still standing.” Well, these giant trees are burning from inside!
One of the trees near the Big Basin Redwoods State Park headquarters burns from within. #BigBasin #CZULightningComplexFire #wildfires pic.twitter.com/p8zhW9ROhb
— Randy Vazquez (@RandyVMedia) August 21, 2020
California has been on fire before, indeed in the distant past it burned this expansively quite regularly. What is most remarkable about the fires of 2020 is that these complexes are burning without the aid of dramatic wind, which is typically, even more than the tinder of dry scrub and forest, what really fuels California fire.
Historically, this kind of burning is unimaginable in the absence of the Santa Ana winds. This means, believe it or not, things could be much, much worse. Indeed, the wind is actually calm, by and large, throughout the state, keeping the burning relatively contained but allowing the smoke to settle locally.
Even so, the smoke covers nearly the entire western United States — choking 11 states and two Canadian provinces.
Model forecast of the wildfire smoke for Thursday. Some improvement is expected with the frontal passage but overall the smoke will remain over the area. #idwx #orwx #wildfires pic.twitter.com/LsnXPcLR3X
— NWS Boise (@NWSBoise) August 20, 2020
And while two active, growing fires are already among the ten biggest ever to hit the state, we are only at just the very beginning of the fall fire season.
The frequency of extreme fire days has doubled since just the 1980s and is poised to grow even more in the decades ahead.
Model forecast of the wildfire smoke for Thursday. Some improvement is expected with the frontal passage but overall the smoke will remain over the area. #idwx #orwx #wildfires pic.twitter.com/LsnXPcLR3X
— NWS Boise (@NWSBoise) August 20, 2020
This past week, in Death Valley, a global temperature record was set, at 130 degrees Fahrenheit. The next day, the forecast predicted 132. That is the temperature of steak cooked medium rare.
Fires are among the best and more horrifying natural disasters. They offer up vivid, scarring images it can be impossible not to read as portents of future nightmares even as they document present tragedies and horrors.
In recent years, they have been a terrifying through-line: 2017’s golfing through the apocalypse, 2018’s Camp Fire evacuation videos, the image of a kangaroo back-lit by roiling orange like a fire diorama.
This year’s fires in California have already produced such a photo, by Noah Berger, which reminds us that no wildfire, indeed no natural disasters of any kind, unfolds in a vacuum, instead cascading upon communities often numbed to catastrophe even as they are made more and more vulnerable with each successive one.
2020 in a single remarkable photo
— Rupert Myers (@RupertMyers) August 20, 2020
– by @noahberger3884 in California pic.twitter.com/EpT3SZWLNV
Notably, there are no people depicted, only a “Welcome” sign mordantly modified to offer pandemic guidance, in the hope that coordinated human response might protect us from that threat. It is less like a depiction of unfolding terror than a real-time relic from a world already lost.
You need more goats: https://youtu.be/n56opj5gJhc
lol!
Gunman, 17, is charged with first degree intentional homicide after shooting dead two BLM protesters in Kenosha as one victim is identified and video emerges of cops giving rifle-toting vigilantes water before the shooting
Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, was arrested on Wednesday in his hometown of Antioch, Illinois and charged with first degree intentional homicide following the shooting death of two protesters
The complaint says the teenager ‘fled the state of Wisconsin with the intent to avoid prosecution’
Rittenhouse was assigned a public defender in Illinois for a hearing on Friday upon his extradition to Wisconsin, where anyone 17 or older is recognized as an adult in the criminal justice system
Dramatic video captured the moment one victim was shot in the head and another was shot in the chest shortly before midnight on Tuesday. A third man was shot in the arm but he survived
The arrest of the teen came hours after video emerged of him walking up to police with his hands in the air and his rifle slung across his body after the shooting
He was apparently allowed to walk on despite members of the crowd yelling for him to be arrested because he had shot people, according to witness accounts and video footage
Footage from earlier in the night appeared to show the teen guarding a local car shop with a group of armed militia members
Another video showed police thanking an armed group, of which the teenager appeared to be part of, and offering them water
Much of Rittenhouse’s Facebook is devoted to praising law enforcement, with references to Blue Lives Matter
News of his arrest came as President Trump said Wisconsin officials had accepted federal law enforcement support following several days of unrest across the city in the wake of Jacob Blake’s shooting.
USA IS OFFICIALLY WILL BE MOTHER OF BEIRUT , MOGADISHU, NIGERIA, ETC> WE ALL MUST CRY AND PRAY??
Cities will become center of storms. Kenosha ro PDX, SEA, to CHI, We will be forced to become refugees to other nations. Talk
to embassies now before all doors are closed.