Single Publication
Settings - change map background and toggle additional layers
Filter - control incident types displayed on map.
Zoom to your location
Reset map zoom and position
Could not determine your location.
Show Legend
Windy Fire
Unit Information
Incident Contacts
- Sequoia National ForestEmail:Phone:559-539-2607Hours:Mon - Fri 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Windy Fire Update, October 2, 2021, evening recap
Windy Fire
Publication Type: News -
The #WindyFire is currently estimated to be 91,963 acres (a 726-acre increase from Saturday morning’s reported acreage). Containment is 52 percent.
On the north side of the fire, south of Camp Nelson, some unburned vegetation in the fire’s interior started to burn actively today; however, it did not pose a threat to containment lines. All firelines around the perimeter that are considered contained are holding.
On the east side of the fire, crews have been able to suppress the fire directly from Johnsondale southward. They are confident they will get to Speas Ridge before dropping into Flynn Canyon where direct suppression-tactics will no longer be feasible. South of Flynn Canyon, helicopters are being used to drop water on the fire’s edge to halt or slow its progression eastward toward the Kern River. On the southeastern corner west of Baker Point, the individual spot fires are all contained.
Along the portion of uncontained fireline on the south side, crews are finding and extinguishing numerous hotspots and expect to work in that area for a couple more days before achieving containment. On the southwest side of the fire this morning near White River, the fire crossed—or “slopped over”—the control line and grew to about 2 acres before crews contained it and connected it back into the primary control lines.
On the west side, the fire is still actively advancing westward, but it is generally moving downslope and not exhibiting extreme behavior. On three dominant ridgelines in the Tule River Indian Reservation, crews initiated a strategic firing operation to encourage the fire to progress evenly as it comes down to the ridgelines.
Very dry daytime and nighttime conditions are expected to persist into early next week. Stronger winds could materialize late tonight, with gusts up to 20 miles per hour possible. Tomorrow, the Kern River drainage will be very prone to strong winds, with gusts 25–30 miles per hour anticipated; elsewhere, gusts will be up to 20 miles per hour. The result will be several hours tomorrow of near-critical to critical fire weather conditions along the Kern River valley and adjacent slopes.
Join us for a virtual public tomorrow, Sunday, October 3, at 7:00 p.m. It will be livestreamed on Facebook and on Zoom (meeting ID: 160 212 1141; passcode: J227!q; call-in phone number: 669-254-5252).
An ASL interpreter will be in attendance.
If you cannot attend live, the video will be available afterward on the Sequoia National Forest Facebook page and also on YouTube for you to watch at your convenience.