LOS ANGELES: A big fire that is currently raging in the North Siskiyou California Regency has spread to a total of 19,680 hectares, with 25 percent of detention, according to the latest information from Inchweb, Interstate incident information system.
The fire lava, which landed on June 24 because of lightning, sized exploded throughout Monday, driven by strong and uncertain winds in the midst of recording hot, reporting the Xinhua news agency.
On Monday morning, the fire only burned around 1,446 hectares with a detention of 20 percent.
Fireworks turned on about three miles northeast weed, a city with 2,700 residents, local authorities forced to issue evacuation orders to thousands of people living in nearby communities.
Meanwhile, another fire, was nicknamed a Tennant fire, broke on the eastern side of the Klamath National Forest on Monday afternoon, according to Cal Fire.
It grew to 9,439 hectares on Thursday with 6 percent contained.
While forest fires are a natural part of the California landscape, the fire season in the state and throughout the US West Coast starts early and ends later with every year.
Climate change is considered the main driver of this trend, Cal Fire said.
Spring temperatures and warmer summer, reduced snow, and spring snowwashes previously creating a longer and more intense dry season that increases moisture pressure on vegetation and makes the forest more susceptible to severe fire, note.