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Wildfire — North Kings River, California

2020-10-01 to 2020-10-31 · North Kings River, California

Event narrative

The Creek Fire continued to burn an average of 2000 acres a day during October under warmer than normal temperatures, low humidities, and a couple of offshore wind events. No additional structures were damaged and spread of the fire was mainly to the northeast. By the end of October, the fire had grown to over 377,000 acres and was 70 percent contained.

Wider weather episode

The Creek fire started at 633 pm PDT on September 4th (Labor Day Weekend) in the vicinity of Big Creek, California near the town of Shaver Lake. The fire was in an area of very heavy tree mortality in the Sierra National Forest. The fire had explosive grown on September 5th and 6th under excessive heat and low humidity, but not much wind. The fire became plume dominated on the 5th and column collapses were noted by AlertFire Cameras late on the 5th within the extremely unstable environment. Damaging fire whirls occurred just north of Mammoth Pool with ground survey estimated winds at 115-125 mph, and near Huntington Lake with patterns indicating winds of 90-107 mph. By the evening of September 6th, the fire fire had grown to 73,278 acres. Extensive smoke allowed the fire to slow some by Monday and Tuesday September 7th-8th, however the fore continued to grow, reaching nearly 153,000 acres by September 9th. Around this time, the complexity of the incident necessitated management of the fire to be split into a north zone and a south zone with 2 overhead teams assigned. The fire closed Highway 168 and may local roads and there were evacuations of as many as 45,000 people. Hundreds of people were rescued by California National Guard helicopters from the Mammoth Pool area and also from the China Peak ski resort. Hot ands dry conditions under strong high pressure continued throughout the remainder of September with extensive smoke often hampering air operations. By the end of September the fire had burned 307,051 acres and had destroyed 853 structures and damaged 64 others. Cost of containment was $106 Million. The fire continued to grow by an average of 2000 acres a day throughout October under warm than normal conditions and low humidities and a couple of offshore wind events. The fire reached 379,571 acres by the end of November.


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 923446. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.