The winds fueling fires in Southern California are begin to relax, but the forecast calls for their return next week.
Maybe it isn't windy where you are right now, but some areas of Southern California are experiencing strong gusts like those ...
So far, the strongest winds recorded during the fires were around 100 miles per hour, which is considered hurricane-force strength. The strong Santa Ana winds are still expected to remain throughout ...
Fire crews are bracing for the possibility of 70 mile per hour winds as they continue to work to contain the Palisades and ...
Watching the fires devastating Los Angeles, residents of the Oakland Hills worry about when disaster could strike again — ...
Fire-fuelling Santa-Ana winds will get a boost from a huge Pacific storm as 100mph gusts push the threat level beyond ...
Extreme fire conditions remain in the Southern California region as high winds have prompted a "Particularly Dangerous Situation" red flag warning,​ weather officials say.
An expert explains what causes extreme winds like the Santa Ana winds in California, and why they create such a dangerous ...
Los Angeles is now being destroyed by fire. Next will be the “Big One” earthquake everyone knows is coming. And then---unless ...
Historically, about 75% of the time, this pattern produces below-average rainfall for San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara ...
The Diablo and Santa Ana winds, officially classified as a foehn wind condition, are an age-old meteorological phenomenon.
Could the windstorm that stoked the Los Angeles fires happen in Northern California? The answer is yes, and it also resulted in a historic fire disaster. Here's an explanation of the phenomenon.