By Rachel Becker, CalMatters
This story was originally published by CalMatters.
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California clocked its second-worst snowpack on record Wednesday, a potentially troubling signal ahead for fire season.
Itโs an alarming end to a winter that saw abnormally dry conditions briefly wiped from Californiaโs drought map in January, for the first time in a quarter-century.
Though precipitation to date has been near average, much of it fell as rain rather than snow. Then Marchโs record-breaking heat melted most of the snow that remains. The stateโs major reservoirs are nevertheless brimming above historic averages and are flirting with capacity, and a smattering of snow, rain and thunderstorms are dousing last monthโs heat wave.
But experts now warn that Californiaโs case of the missing snowpack could herald an early fire season in the mountains.
On Wednesday, state engineers conducting the symbolic April 1 snowpack measurement at Phillips Station south of Lake Tahoe found no measurable snow in patches of white dotting the grassy field.
โI want to welcome you call to probably one of the quickest snow surveys weโve had โ maybe one where people could actually use an umbrella,โ joked Karla Nemeth, director of the California Department of Water Resources. โWeโre getting a lot of questions about are we heading into a hydrologic drought? The answer is, I donโt know.โ
State data reports that Californiaโs snowpack is closing out the season at an alarming 18% of average statewide, and an even more abysmal 6% of average in the northern mountains that feed Californiaโs major reservoirs.
Only the extreme drought year of 2015 beat this yearโs snowpack for the worst on record, measuring in at just 5% of average on April 1st, when the snow historically is at its deepest.
โI think everyone’s anticipating that it will be a long, busy fire season,โ said Lenya Quinn-Davidson, director of the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Fire Network.
โWithout a snowpack, and with an early spring, it just means that thereโs much more time for something like that to happen.โ

โItโs pretty bizarre up hereโ
In the city of South Lake Tahoe, which survived the massive Caldor Fire in the fall of 2021 without losing any structures, fire chief Jim Drennan said his department is already ramping up prevention efforts.
โIt’s pretty bizarre up here right now. It really seems like June conditions more than March,โ Drennan said. โPeople are already turning the sprinklers on for their lawns.โ
Without more precipitation, an early spring may complicate prescribed burning efforts. But Drennan said fire agencies in the Tahoe basin can start mechanically clearing fuels from forest areas earlier than usual.
โThat means we can get more work done,โ he said.
It also means homeowners need to start hardening their homes now, said Martin Goldberg, battalion chief and fuels management officer for the Lake Valley Fire Protection District, which protects unincorporated communities in the Lake Tahoe Basinโs south shore.
Goldberg urges residents to scour their yards for burnable materials, create defensible space and reach out to local fire departments with questions. The risks are widespread โ from firewood, wooden fences, gas cans, plants, pine needles โ even lawn furniture stacked against a house.
โIn years past, I wouldn’t even think of raking and clearing until May,โ Goldberg said. โBut my yard’s completely cleared of snowpack, and it has been for a couple weeks now.โ
โA haystack fireโ
Battalion chief David Acuรฑa, a spokesperson for Cal Fire, said fire season is shaped by more than just one yearโs snowpack.
Climate change has been remaking Californiaโs fire seasons into fire years. And Californiaโs recent average to abundant water years have fueled what Acuรฑa called โbumper crops of vegetation and brush.โ
โMost of California is like a haystack. And if youโve ever seen a haystack fire, they burn very intensely because there’s layers of fuel,โ Acuรฑa said.
Like Quinn-Davidson, Acuรฑa wasnโt ready to make specific predictions about fires to come.
But John Abatzoglou, a professor of climatology at UC Merced, said the temperatures and snowpack conditions this year offer a glimpse of California in the latter decades of this century, as fossil fuel use continues to drive global temperatures higher.
How this yearโs fires will play out will depend on when, where and how wind, heat, fuel and ignitions combine. But it foreshadows the consequences of a warmer California for water and fire under climate change.
โThis,โ Abatzoglou said, โis yet another stress test for the future in the state.โ
This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.






