42,000-FOOT-TALL PLUMES OF ASH AND SMOKE
143-MPH FIRENADOES
1,500-DEGREE BLASTS OF HEAT
ON THE WINDY, HOT DAY OF JULY 26, 2018, AS RECORD 113-degree temperatures baked Redding, California, in the northern Sacramento Valley, Eric Knapp toiled in an air-conditioned government office. After work, he planned to meet his wife and 3-year-old daughter, and some family friends, for dinner. Slender and fair-skinned with a gentle smile, Knapp is a research ecologist for the US Forest Service. He was well aware that, three days earlier, in coastal mountains west of town, a wildfire had started when a trailer got a flat tire and the metal wheel rim scraped the asphalt, sending sparks into dry brush.
Like the vast majority of wildfires, this one, called the Carr Fire, burned initially as a wide…