More than 100 Florida wildfires scorch state, a sign of how dry we are
Last year Florida was waterlogged. This year Florida is on fire.
More than 100 active wildfires are burning across the state right now, according to the Florida Forest Service. Twenty-five of them are scorching more than 100 acres each.
"We're usually not this active this early in the season," the service's assistant fire chief, Ralph Crawford, said Monday.
Since February, wildfires have swept across 68,000 acres of the state, Crawford said, noting that that amount is higher than the average acreage burned over the past five years.
"And we're just barely into April," he added. "Usually May is our busiest month."
Heavy rains north of Gainesville last week helped tamp down the wildfire threat in North Florida, said Florida's state climatologist, David Zierden. But south of Gainesville remains so dry that most of the peninsula is classified as being in a moderate drought, while southwest Florida is classified as facing extreme drought conditions.
With no rain forecast for at least another week, "it's going to get worse before it gets better," Zierden predicted.