Wind and Wildfire

From the Cliff Mass Weather Blog

Cliff Mass

When it comes to Northwest wildfires, many only consider precipitation and temperature.

But for most Northwest wildfires during the summer, another element is more important:  strong winds.

Recent grass and range fires in eastern Washington are prime examples of their “windy” origin.

For example, yesterday, there was a grass fire near Winthrop (see below).  Strong winds were crucial.

Another grass/range fire (the Peterson fire) surged rapidly this week in Klickitat County (below).  Strong winds again.

A few weeks ago, large range fires (e.g., Juniper Dune, Tule Rd) were also forced by strong winds.

In a map of recent eastern Washington wildfires, virtually all were associated with strong winds (graphic courtesy of the Washington State Department of Ecology).


More than climate change warming, strong winds are the essential ingredient for the large grass/range fires in the region.  

In fact, cool/wet spring weather can worsen wildfires in our region, since wet/cool springs enhance the amount of vegetation, which inevitably dries out during our typically arid summers.  That means more fuel.

This week was a great example of strong winds, associated with cooler temperatures, leading to rapidly growing range/grass fires.

Consider the winds at Ellensburg from June 22 to today (below).  Sustained winds are shown in blue and gusts with black dots.

A large acceleration of the winds started on June 26, with some gusts reaching over 50 mph!

As the winds increased, temperatures greatly COOLED at this location (see below).

Want to be impressed with how strong the winds have been this week, east of the Cascade crest?   

Below are the maximum gusts yesterday (Sunday) over eastern Washington.   

Wow.  Many exceed 50 mph, and some reach over 60 mph.

Why are there strong, fire-supporting winds when temperatures cool?

When cool air moves into the region from the west, it causes pressure to rise west of the crest, since cold air is denser and heavier.  That causes low-level pressure to rise.   Even if some cool air gets over the Cascades, the depth of the cool air is greater west of the crest, allowing the pressure to rise more to the west.

To illustrate, there is a sea level pressure analysis (solid lines), sustained surface winds (wind barbs), and low-level temperatures (color shading_ at 5 PM Wednesday.   Cooler temperatures to the west and a strong pressure difference over the Cascades.  

A day later,  eastern Washington had cooled, and much stronger winds had spread over the Inland Empire.

This weekend, temperatures will warm, and the winds along the eastern slopes of the Cascades should weaken.  

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20 Comments
Scarecrow Repair
July 1, 2026 6:04 am

Winds also dry out wet grass faster. I don’t know how much that matters.

Scissor
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
July 1, 2026 6:20 am

Yes. Moisture content of biomass factors into whether it will ignite, sustain a flame, or not.

Here in the Front Range of Colorado, after a generally warm and dry winter, weather patterns shifted around late April into a seemingly wetter regime. We’re still below average for precipitation but we’re catching up.

Reply to  Scissor
July 1, 2026 9:49 am

In the Roaring Fork Valley I’ve had .11″ over 6/25-27, since May.

Mr.
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
July 1, 2026 9:16 am

The invasive Cheat grass variety apparently dries out ready to burn in just an hour or so when conditions allow.

Mr.
Reply to  Mr.
July 1, 2026 9:18 am

[sorry, meant as reply to Ron Long’s comment below]

MarkW
Reply to  Mr.
July 1, 2026 1:59 pm

It works as a response to SR’s post as well.

MarkW
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
July 1, 2026 1:57 pm

1 day vs 2 days.
Not much of a difference

July 1, 2026 6:25 am

So where it is windy becomes Savanna or prairie because of forest fires being more prevalent than “tree growth”…interesting thought…

July 1, 2026 6:46 am

I had understood, during something I read some time ago, that large wildfires were comparable to “living organisms” (with plenty of quotation marks) in the sense that they were self-sustaining, by creating, as specified in that article, currents favorable to their expansion. Terrifying. And entirely natural. And manageable, provided forests are properly maintained!!

John Hultquist
Reply to  Charles Armand
July 1, 2026 12:12 pm

You can find this concept in the book about the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire in Alberta, Canada. See on Amazon; a paperback is available.
Fire Weather: A True Story from a Hotter World by John Vaillant
The author goes overboard on the global warming theme, ignoring previous fires in the region. Wikipedia has an entry for the Chinchaga Fire that mentions the “1950 Great Smoke Pall” – I remember this as a small lad in western Pennsylvania.

Ron Long
July 1, 2026 7:20 am

Winds pushing a fire are for sure a factor on destructive effects. But, in northern Nevada and southeast Oregon, a wet Spring and abundant Cheatgrass is a wildcard. Cheatgrass is edible only when green, in the Spring, and when it dries out and dry lightening strikes in the summer, it starts a fire that races along unchecked. Examine google earth tm scenes and you can see criss-crossing burn scars on the prairie type lands.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Ron Long
July 1, 2026 9:28 am

It’s why cheatgrass is called ‘grassoline’. And after it burns off, it eventually comes back again just as thick as before.

July 1, 2026 8:07 am

Blaming the weather is useless and destructive because we can’t control it. When it comes to fire the one thing we can control is the FUEL. 

The Feds shut down logging in the PNW 30+ years ago, but the forests kept growing. The accumulating biomass has erupted into Kill Everything megafires. Yet the Ruling Elites refuse to change their policies. How stupid and hateful is that?

These demonic monsters also want to eliminate cattle ranching. What will that do to fuel loads? You don’t have to be a genius to answer that question.

People live in wood houses and eat meat and dairy. By “people” I mean everybody including woke green gay warmonger idiot political kleptomaniacs. These same debased losers want to incinerate the world, which means themselves as well. It’s violent suicide imposed on all of us by our “leaders”. I’m sick of this society. Too many evil skunks stinking up the place.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  OR For
July 1, 2026 12:32 pm

Fuel, yes.
Not sure how to control arson.

MarkW
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
July 1, 2026 2:03 pm

Keep the fuel low, and arson becomes less of a risk.
As to controlling them, I would say make them pay restitution for damages caused, with debtor’s prison and forced labor until the debt is satisfied.
If anyone dies, try em for murder then hang em high.

PS: I have the same philosophy towards hackers.

DarrinB
Reply to  OR For
July 2, 2026 10:13 am

Doing away with ranching? That’s peanuts compared to the bill in Oregon that garnered enough signatures to make the next ballot. This bill basically kills humans doing anything with or to an animal. No ranching, no chicken farms, no hogs, forget sheep, no hunting/fishing, no pets, hell no vets.

DipChip
July 1, 2026 10:19 am

X or twitter posted a photo of the winds in Highmore South Dakota. From the photo I count 9, Nine wind turbins with the turbins on the grund.

https://x.com/posted_news/status/2071661902829084902

“story tip”

DipChip
Reply to  DipChip
July 1, 2026 10:28 am

May be 8, I counted one in the for-ground that is the turbine from the tower missing its turbin.

John Hultquist
July 1, 2026 12:00 pm

With respect to areas such as WA State east of the Cascades the fire season begins with the Spring Dip in foliar moisture content. This refers to a period in early spring when the prior year’s vegetation dries {including needle leaf trees} before new growth begins. Grasses, such as Cheatgrass, typically germinate in fall, grow through winter and spring, and dry out in late spring. A few weeks ago Cheat’s 2026 crop was ready to burn and now most grasses are ripe.

tmatsci
July 1, 2026 5:24 pm

The fire itself accelerates the wind due to the buoyancy of the hot air emitted above the fire. In an open area the wind tends to dissipate this, but if the fire runs into a wooded area this effect tends to increase and may increase to the point where a fire “tornado” is created.

There is a tendency to consider grass fires to be mild. The reverse is often the case because easy access for air to the surface of the grass stalks with the likelihood of low water content in the stalks promotes rapid ignition of the grass and it burns with very high intensity. Thus its temperature may be as high as several hundreds of degrees.