Fire Danger News and Info Tracker
Fire activity across the United States remains light overall but shows pockets of elevated danger amid dry conditions and gusty winds. According to the National Interagency Fire Center's report from April 17, 2026, 144 new fires were reported nationwide that week, with three new large incidents, bringing the total of uncontained large fires to 23 across 23 states, burning 320,755 acres and involving 992 personnel, all under full suppression strategies. The Southern Area sees the most concentration, but the Northwest dominates large fire counts. Washington leads with eight active large fires scorching 151,947 acres, followed by three each in California at 75,486 acres, Idaho, and Oregon. Montana reports two, while Wyoming and Hawaii each have one, including a 380-acre blaze in Hawaii. Five fires were contained recently, with two in Washington. Florida faces the highest immediate fire danger in recent days. First Coast News reports critical fire weather through Wednesday, with high to critical ratings across the region, including red flag warnings until evening on April 20 in areas west of Interstate 95, such as Clay, Putnam, Columbia counties, and into Waycross, western Camden, and Glenn counties. A new 1,700-acre wildfire prompted voluntary evacuations on Varney Road and Woodward Lane, affecting over 20 residents, alongside a separate 700-acre fire in Putnam County. Bone-dry conditions fuel this threat, as an ongoing historic drought grips nearly all of Florida from the Panhandle through Orlando, Tampa, and Fort Myers, with wildfires near Gainesville and Jacksonville. The National Weather Service confirms critical fire weather through Thursday in the Southern Plains and Florida portions due to gusty winds and low humidity, while a Pacific storm brings rain to the West Coast but heavy snow to the Sierra Nevada. USA Today tracks lingering large fires from late 2025, like the fully contained 59,844-acre Garnet in California's Fresno County and near-complete blazes in Washington and Oregon. Emerging patterns reveal seasonal persistence in the Northwest from prior dry spells, contrasting with explosive Southeast starts driven by drought and wind, heightening national vigilance despite light overall activity. The National 7-Day Significant Fire Potential map shows moderate to high risks in key areas, underscoring the need for sustained monitoring. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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