Thousands under evacuation orders in California and Oregon as wildfires burn

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/25/california-oregon-pickett-flat-wildfires

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Pickett fire chars Napa wine country while predicted thunderstorms add to danger of Oregon’s Flat fire

Thousands of homes in northern California wine country and central Oregon were under evacuation orders as firefighting crews battled wildfires in dry, hot weather.

The Pickett fire, which had charred more than 6,800 acres of Napa county, was just 13% contained by Monday morning, according to the California department of forestry & fire protection, or Cal Fire.

About 150 people were ordered to leave their homes, while another 360 were under evacuation warnings as the fire threatened 500 structures near Aetna Springs and Pope Valley, 80 miles (127km) north of San Francisco, said a Cal Fire spokesperson, Jason Clay. Some evacuation orders were later lifted.

In Oregon, the Flat fire in Deschutes and Jefferson counties had about 4,000 homes under various levels of evacuation notice, including 1,000 with orders to leave immediately, according to the state fire marshal’s office.

Firefighters were able to cut containment lines and continued to suppress fires in some residential areas. However, they faced significant challenges with difficult terrain, low humidity and triple-digit temperatures in some areas, officials said.

Some homes have burned, and officials said they were working to confirm the status of structures.

More than 1,230 firefighters backed by 10 helicopters were battling the California fire, which began in a remote area on Thursday after a week of hot weather. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Residents of the western United States have been sweltering in a heatwave that hospitalized some people, with temperatures hitting dangerous levels throughout the weekend in Washington, Oregon, southern California, Nevada and Arizona.

Even after the heatwave subsides, the risks will remain. With minimal moisture in areas of California and the Pacific north-west, fire dangers are expected to climb through the next month and into October.

Vegetation is dangerously dry and overgrown in parts of Nevada, California, Utah, Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming.

The heat – which will bake moisture out of already parched landscapes and increase the potential for ignitions, rapid fire spread and extreme fire behavior – also create significant threats to public health.

Extreme heat, often called a “silent killer”, already ranks as the most lethal weather-related disaster in the US, and deaths are increasing. Fueled by the climate crisis, and often exacerbated by concrete cityscapes that cook when temperatures rise, heatwaves are getting longer, larger and more intense.

The Pickett fire began in the same area as the much larger Glass fire in 2020, which crossed into Sonoma county and eventually burned about 105 square miles (272 sq km) and more than 1,500 structures.

The 2020 blaze was driven by wind, while the current conflagration is fueled mainly by dry vegetation on steep slopes — some of it dead and downed trees left over from the Glass fire and some of it grass and brush that grew back and then dried out again, said Clay.

The area of the Oregon fire is in a high desert climate, where dried grasses and juniper trees are burning and fire is racing through canyon areas where it is challenging to create containment lines, said Jason Carr, Deschutes county sheriff’s spokesman.

The fire began on Thursday night and grew quickly amid hot, gusty conditions. Fire officials were keeping an eye on isolated thunderstorms in southern Oregon that could drift north on Sunday, a state fire marshals spokesman, Chris Schimmer, said in a video posted to Facebook.

“If we get thunderstorms that roll through, it can ... cause the fire to jump [containment] lines,” said Carr, adding the downdrafts can push fire in multiple directions.