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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Alex Wigglesworth

Fire near California-Oregon border explodes overnight to 18,000 acres

A wildfire near the California border with Oregon exploded overnight from 300 acres to an estimated 18,000 acres, prompting evacuation orders for nearby communities.

The McKinney fire is burning through heavy, drought-stressed timber in steep terrain in the Klamath National Forest west of Yreka, California, said Caroline Quintanilla, a public information officer.

“It’s very active fire behavior at this point,” she said.

Evacuation orders have been issued for multiple communities, including Scott Bar, Klamath River and Horse Creek. The orders encompass at least 500 homes, according to the Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office.

The dynamic situation forced firefighters to shift their efforts from controlling the perimeter of the fire to assisting with evacuations and defending structures, Quintanilla said.

The fire started Friday afternoon on the south side of the Klamath River amid record-breaking heat.

A weather station in Montague, California, to the east of the fire, had recorded six days of triple-digit temperatures that peaked Friday at 111 degrees, with the heat breaking daily records each day Monday through Friday, according to preliminary National Weather Service data. On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the heat surpassed the highest temperature ever recorded by the station: 109 degrees on June 27, 2021.

Flames were fanned by erratic winds from thunderstorms that moved through the area overnight, Quintanilla said.

Intense heat from the fire sent up a massive pyrocumulonimbus cloud that reached at least 39,000 feet into the sky, said Misty Firmin, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Medford, Oregon. These fire storm clouds can potentially produce lightning and strong, gusty winds, she said.

When the cloud collapsed Friday night, an outflow of air kicked off an additional thunderstorm, she said.

The cause of the fire remained under investigation.

The National Weather Service has issued a red-flag warning for the area that’s in effect through Saturday, saying that scattered thunderstorms could result in abundant lightning striking critically dry vegetation. A fire weather watch is also in effect through Sunday.

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