You can talk about acres burned, containment, or the number of firefighters engaged, but a quote from a state forestry official in Oregon might provide the best sense of just how big the Bootleg Fire has grown: “The fire is so large and generating so much energy and extreme heat that it’s changing the weather,” says Marcus Kauffman. “Normally the weather predicts what the fire will do. In this case, the fire is predicting what the weather will do.” More on that:
- The fire is creating a rare phenomenon known as pyrocumulus clouds, per CNN. These form when a wildfire's extreme heat forces air to rise rapidly. As trees and other plant life burn, the water inside them evaporates into that rising air, per a separate explainer by CNN. "This additional moisture in the atmosphere condenses in the cooler air above, on smoke particles also produced by the fire." Essentially, the clouds become self-contained thunderstorms, complete with lightning and fierce winds.