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WISCONSIN WEATHER

Hot Weather, Windy Conditions Lead to High Fire Danger Across Portions of Wisconsin

Hot Weather, Windy Conditions Lead to High Fire Danger Across Portions of Wisconsin


A high fire danger is in effect for portions of Wisconsin heading into Labor Day weekend.

The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources said hot weather, mixed with dry and windy conditions throughout the southern and central portions of the state, is leading to the elevated fire risk. Catherine Koele, a wildfire prevention specialist for the DNR, said residents should avoid all outdoor burning during the next few days.

"That includes anything that can cause a spark," Koele said. "Anything that can cause a spark can cause a wildfire."

Koele said risks even include using a chainsaw in the woods, dragging boat trailer chains or having a fire while camping. On windy days or dry days, embers from any fire, especially burn piles and campfires, can easily get out of control and cause a wildfire if not properly extinguished, according to the DNR.

The National Weather Service said high temperatures will reach the mid-to-upper-90s on Sunday and Monday in the southern portion of the state. Jaclyn Anderson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Milwaukee/Sullivan, said those temperatures are high for this time of year and could even break records in some areas.

"It's a pretty significant heat wave for this time of year for us," Anderson said.

"The combination of the heat, the extreme heat, and then the drier conditions are what is leading to some of those fire concerns," Anderson added.

Wisconsin has been dealing with ongoing drought conditions for much of the summer. Koele said the central and southern part of the state is hovering at severe to extreme drought level right now because of high temperatures and low precipitation totals.

"We've been in kind of this deficit over much of the late spring and summer, and we just can't seem to catch up," she said. "That's really not in our favor when it comes to causing fires."

Even with this year's drought, the state has been growing warmer and wetter overall, with average precipitation increasing about 5 inches since 1950, according to a report from the Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts. The past decade has been the wettest on record, but the Midwest is likely to see more rapid onsets of drought.

The state DNR has already responded to 10 wildfires in the last week, according to a news release.

 

Source: wpr.org

Photo Credit: ontario-ministry-of-natural-resources

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