LOS ANGELES — If you live near the coast, wildfire season starts with Southern California’s notorious Santa Ana winds, which usually arrive in the fall.
But inland, the fire season is already well underway.
It’s as if there are two separate fire seasons, said David Gomberg, a forecaster and fire weather program manager with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. His forecast office has warned for more than a week of the potential for fires that can explode into monsters, sending smoke plumes thousands of feet into the sky. And they do it without any significant winds, such as a Santa Anas.
“Strong winds are not a requisite condition for large uncontrollable fires,” said John Abatzoglou, a professor of climatology at UC Merced who has studied the bifurcation of Southern California fire activity.
These fires, he said, are driven by a trifecta of fuels, topography, dryness and heat — of which there has been plenty in the Southwest this summer.