Land Management Forecasts
Issued by NWS Los Angeles, CA

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ECCDA Discussions
National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard CA
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

ECC029-181645-
Los Padres National Forest-
Discussion for Vandenberg ECC Dispatch
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

...Discussion from Monterey...

Temperatures remain cooler through Monday before an upper level
ridge builds over the West Coast. This will result in a gradual
warming trend Tuesday through the end of the week with  the hottest
temperatures (upper 90s to low 100s) on Thursday and  Friday.
Minimal overnight cooling is expected Thursday and Friday  across
the higher elevations where low temperatures will only drop into the
upper 60s to mid 70s. Overnight recoveries will stay  fair to good
for areas within the marine layer but for areas above it (approx.
2000 ft) overnight recoveries will remain poor. Dry  daytime
conditions will persist through the entire week with poor  humidity
retention across the interior. The driest conditions will be in the
interior Central Coast where daytime humidity minimums  will drop
into the low teens. While Thursday and Friday look to be the peak,
conditions may be slow to improve as onshore flow looks to only
slightly increase into the weekend.

Note : All winds are 20-foot Winds Unless otherwise specified.
Thunderstorms imply strong, gusty and erratic winds.



...Discussion from Los Angeles/Oxnard...

...LONG DURATION HEATWAVE WITH WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER
CONDITIONS INCLUDING POTENTIAL FOR LARGE PLUME DOMINATED FIRES AWAY
FROM THE COAST FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH
SATURDAY EVENING FOR AN UNSEASONABLY HOT AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING EXPLOSIVE FIRE BEHAVIOR FROM VERTICAL PLUME
GROWTH...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND LOCALLY BREEZY WINDS FOR
PORTIONS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA
COUNTIES...

There will be gradual warming and drying across the interior on
Monday and Tuesday as upper level high pressure begins to expand
westward. There will be gusty Sundowner winds the next few evenings,
mainly focused from Gaviota to San Marcos Pass. Wind gusts of 35 to
50 mph will be common each evening. While humidity levels will be
elevated this evening, but could lower into the 20 to 40 percent
range on Monday evening and Tuesday evening, thereby increasing the
fire weather concerns for southwest Santa Barbara county.

A long duration heat wave is becoming more likely from Wednesday
through Sunday. With onshore flow expected to be weaker with this
event, heat impacts could potentially spread to inland portions of
the coastal plain. The combination of hot temperatures, low
humidities (including poor overnight recoveries in the mountains and
foothills), instability, locally breezy conditions, and critically
dry fuels away from the coast, will likely bring widespread elevated
fire weather conditions across the valleys, mountains. During the
peak of the heatwave, which will likely be Thursday through
Saturday, temperatures could soar to between 98 and 110 degrees for
the valleys, lower mountains, and deserts, with minimum humidities
generally ranging between 8 and 20  percent, and mixing heights
potentially rising to between 12,000 and 17,000 feet across the
interior. While widespread strong winds are not anticipated with
this upcoming heat wave, the hot temperatures, low humidities,
increased instability, locally breezy conditions (mainly across
mountains, foothills, and canyons), and critically dry fuels will
bring the threat of large plume dominated fires (especially in the
mountains and foothills), capable of rapid growth and extreme fire
behavior. The highest risk areas will be the interior mountains and
foothills of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, as well as Santa
Clarita Valley where a Fire Weather Watch has been issued. The Fire
Weather Watch area covers portions of the mountains and  foothills
of Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which have been a
climatologically notorious area for large plume-dominated fires in
similar weather patterns to what is coming later this week.
Moreover, the western edge of a southwest-states monsoonal moisture
influx will overlie Los Angeles and Ventura Counties,  which will
contribute to the development of atmospheric buoyancy by Friday and
Saturday without significantly moistening the airmass -- i.e.,
displaced away from the core of the moisture source. While
lightning-induced fire ignitions are a distinctive possibility on
the peripheries of rain cores, the increase in  buoyancy will
further aid in vertical plume growth accompanied by  potential
pyrocumulus development and related explosive fire behavior.


$$

ECC028-181645-
Santa Barbara County excluding Los Padres National Forest-
Discussion for Santa Barbara ECC Dispatch
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

...LONG DURATION HEATWAVE WITH WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER
CONDITIONS INCLUDING POTENTIAL FOR LARGE PLUME DOMINATED FIRES AWAY
FROM THE COAST FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH
SATURDAY EVENING FOR AN UNSEASONABLY HOT AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING EXPLOSIVE FIRE BEHAVIOR FROM VERTICAL PLUME
GROWTH...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND LOCALLY BREEZY WINDS FOR
PORTIONS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA
COUNTIES...

There will be gradual warming and drying across the interior on
Monday and Tuesday as upper level high pressure begins to expand
westward. There will be gusty Sundowner winds the next few evenings,
mainly focused from Gaviota to San Marcos Pass. Wind gusts of 35 to
50 mph will be common each evening. While humidity levels will be
elevated this evening, but could lower into the 20 to 40 percent
range on Monday evening and Tuesday evening, thereby increasing the
fire weather concerns for southwest Santa Barbara county.

A long duration heat wave is becoming more likely from Wednesday
through Sunday. With onshore flow expected to be weaker with this
event, heat impacts could potentially spread to inland portions of
the coastal plain. The combination of hot temperatures, low
humidities (including poor overnight recoveries in the mountains and
foothills), instability, locally breezy conditions, and critically
dry fuels away from the coast, will likely bring widespread elevated
fire weather conditions across the valleys, mountains. During the
peak of the heatwave, which will likely be Thursday through
Saturday, temperatures could soar to between 98 and 110 degrees for
the valleys, lower mountains, and deserts, with minimum humidities
generally ranging between 8 and 20  percent, and mixing heights
potentially rising to between 12,000 and 17,000 feet across the
interior. While widespread strong winds are not anticipated with
this upcoming heat wave, the hot temperatures, low humidities,
increased instability, locally breezy conditions (mainly across
mountains, foothills, and canyons), and critically dry fuels will
bring the threat of large plume dominated fires (especially in the
mountains and foothills), capable of rapid growth and extreme fire
behavior. The highest risk areas will be the interior mountains and
foothills of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, as well as Santa
Clarita Valley where a Fire Weather Watch has been issued. The Fire
Weather Watch area covers portions of the mountains and  foothills
of Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which have been a
climatologically notorious area for large plume-dominated fires in
similar weather patterns to what is coming later this week.
Moreover, the western edge of a southwest-states monsoonal moisture
influx will overlie Los Angeles and Ventura Counties,  which will
contribute to the development of atmospheric buoyancy by Friday and
Saturday without significantly moistening the airmass -- i.e.,
displaced away from the core of the moisture source. While
lightning-induced fire ignitions are a distinctive possibility on
the peripheries of rain cores, the increase in  buoyancy will
further aid in vertical plume growth accompanied by  potential
pyrocumulus development and related explosive fire behavior.


$$

ECC031-181645-
Angeles National Forest-
Discussion for Lancaster ECC Dispatch
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

...LONG DURATION HEATWAVE WITH WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER
CONDITIONS INCLUDING POTENTIAL FOR LARGE PLUME DOMINATED FIRES AWAY
FROM THE COAST FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH
SATURDAY EVENING FOR AN UNSEASONABLY HOT AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING EXPLOSIVE FIRE BEHAVIOR FROM VERTICAL PLUME
GROWTH...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND LOCALLY BREEZY WINDS FOR
PORTIONS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA
COUNTIES...

There will be gradual warming and drying across the interior on
Monday and Tuesday as upper level high pressure begins to expand
westward. There will be gusty Sundowner winds the next few evenings,
mainly focused from Gaviota to San Marcos Pass. Wind gusts of 35 to
50 mph will be common each evening. While humidity levels will be
elevated this evening, but could lower into the 20 to 40 percent
range on Monday evening and Tuesday evening, thereby increasing the
fire weather concerns for southwest Santa Barbara county.

A long duration heat wave is becoming more likely from Wednesday
through Sunday. With onshore flow expected to be weaker with this
event, heat impacts could potentially spread to inland portions of
the coastal plain. The combination of hot temperatures, low
humidities (including poor overnight recoveries in the mountains and
foothills), instability, locally breezy conditions, and critically
dry fuels away from the coast, will likely bring widespread elevated
fire weather conditions across the valleys, mountains. During the
peak of the heatwave, which will likely be Thursday through
Saturday, temperatures could soar to between 98 and 110 degrees for
the valleys, lower mountains, and deserts, with minimum humidities
generally ranging between 8 and 20  percent, and mixing heights
potentially rising to between 12,000 and 17,000 feet across the
interior. While widespread strong winds are not anticipated with
this upcoming heat wave, the hot temperatures, low humidities,
increased instability, locally breezy conditions (mainly across
mountains, foothills, and canyons), and critically dry fuels will
bring the threat of large plume dominated fires (especially in the
mountains and foothills), capable of rapid growth and extreme fire
behavior. The highest risk areas will be the interior mountains and
foothills of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, as well as Santa
Clarita Valley where a Fire Weather Watch has been issued. The Fire
Weather Watch area covers portions of the mountains and  foothills
of Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which have been a
climatologically notorious area for large plume-dominated fires in
similar weather patterns to what is coming later this week.
Moreover, the western edge of a southwest-states monsoonal moisture
influx will overlie Los Angeles and Ventura Counties,  which will
contribute to the development of atmospheric buoyancy by Friday and
Saturday without significantly moistening the airmass -- i.e.,
displaced away from the core of the moisture source. While
lightning-induced fire ignitions are a distinctive possibility on
the peripheries of rain cores, the increase in  buoyancy will
further aid in vertical plume growth accompanied by  potential
pyrocumulus development and related explosive fire behavior.


$$

ECC024-181645-
San Luis Obispo County-
Discussion for San Luis Obispo ECC Dispatch
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

...LONG DURATION HEATWAVE WITH WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER
CONDITIONS INCLUDING POTENTIAL FOR LARGE PLUME DOMINATED FIRES AWAY
FROM THE COAST FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH
SATURDAY EVENING FOR AN UNSEASONABLY HOT AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING EXPLOSIVE FIRE BEHAVIOR FROM VERTICAL PLUME
GROWTH...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND LOCALLY BREEZY WINDS FOR
PORTIONS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA
COUNTIES...

There will be gradual warming and drying across the interior on
Monday and Tuesday as upper level high pressure begins to expand
westward. There will be gusty Sundowner winds the next few evenings,
mainly focused from Gaviota to San Marcos Pass. Wind gusts of 35 to
50 mph will be common each evening. While humidity levels will be
elevated this evening, but could lower into the 20 to 40 percent
range on Monday evening and Tuesday evening, thereby increasing the
fire weather concerns for southwest Santa Barbara county.

A long duration heat wave is becoming more likely from Wednesday
through Sunday. With onshore flow expected to be weaker with this
event, heat impacts could potentially spread to inland portions of
the coastal plain. The combination of hot temperatures, low
humidities (including poor overnight recoveries in the mountains and
foothills), instability, locally breezy conditions, and critically
dry fuels away from the coast, will likely bring widespread elevated
fire weather conditions across the valleys, mountains. During the
peak of the heatwave, which will likely be Thursday through
Saturday, temperatures could soar to between 98 and 110 degrees for
the valleys, lower mountains, and deserts, with minimum humidities
generally ranging between 8 and 20  percent, and mixing heights
potentially rising to between 12,000 and 17,000 feet across the
interior. While widespread strong winds are not anticipated with
this upcoming heat wave, the hot temperatures, low humidities,
increased instability, locally breezy conditions (mainly across
mountains, foothills, and canyons), and critically dry fuels will
bring the threat of large plume dominated fires (especially in the
mountains and foothills), capable of rapid growth and extreme fire
behavior. The highest risk areas will be the interior mountains and
foothills of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, as well as Santa
Clarita Valley where a Fire Weather Watch has been issued. The Fire
Weather Watch area covers portions of the mountains and  foothills
of Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which have been a
climatologically notorious area for large plume-dominated fires in
similar weather patterns to what is coming later this week.
Moreover, the western edge of a southwest-states monsoonal moisture
influx will overlie Los Angeles and Ventura Counties,  which will
contribute to the development of atmospheric buoyancy by Friday and
Saturday without significantly moistening the airmass -- i.e.,
displaced away from the core of the moisture source. While
lightning-induced fire ignitions are a distinctive possibility on
the peripheries of rain cores, the increase in  buoyancy will
further aid in vertical plume growth accompanied by  potential
pyrocumulus development and related explosive fire behavior.


$$

ECC032-181645-
Ventura County excluding Los Padres National Forest-
Discussion for Ventura ECC Dispatch
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

...LONG DURATION HEATWAVE WITH WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER
CONDITIONS INCLUDING POTENTIAL FOR LARGE PLUME DOMINATED FIRES AWAY
FROM THE COAST FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH
SATURDAY EVENING FOR AN UNSEASONABLY HOT AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING EXPLOSIVE FIRE BEHAVIOR FROM VERTICAL PLUME
GROWTH...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND LOCALLY BREEZY WINDS FOR
PORTIONS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA
COUNTIES...

There will be gradual warming and drying across the interior on
Monday and Tuesday as upper level high pressure begins to expand
westward. There will be gusty Sundowner winds the next few evenings,
mainly focused from Gaviota to San Marcos Pass. Wind gusts of 35 to
50 mph will be common each evening. While humidity levels will be
elevated this evening, but could lower into the 20 to 40 percent
range on Monday evening and Tuesday evening, thereby increasing the
fire weather concerns for southwest Santa Barbara county.

A long duration heat wave is becoming more likely from Wednesday
through Sunday. With onshore flow expected to be weaker with this
event, heat impacts could potentially spread to inland portions of
the coastal plain. The combination of hot temperatures, low
humidities (including poor overnight recoveries in the mountains and
foothills), instability, locally breezy conditions, and critically
dry fuels away from the coast, will likely bring widespread elevated
fire weather conditions across the valleys, mountains. During the
peak of the heatwave, which will likely be Thursday through
Saturday, temperatures could soar to between 98 and 110 degrees for
the valleys, lower mountains, and deserts, with minimum humidities
generally ranging between 8 and 20  percent, and mixing heights
potentially rising to between 12,000 and 17,000 feet across the
interior. While widespread strong winds are not anticipated with
this upcoming heat wave, the hot temperatures, low humidities,
increased instability, locally breezy conditions (mainly across
mountains, foothills, and canyons), and critically dry fuels will
bring the threat of large plume dominated fires (especially in the
mountains and foothills), capable of rapid growth and extreme fire
behavior. The highest risk areas will be the interior mountains and
foothills of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, as well as Santa
Clarita Valley where a Fire Weather Watch has been issued. The Fire
Weather Watch area covers portions of the mountains and  foothills
of Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which have been a
climatologically notorious area for large plume-dominated fires in
similar weather patterns to what is coming later this week.
Moreover, the western edge of a southwest-states monsoonal moisture
influx will overlie Los Angeles and Ventura Counties,  which will
contribute to the development of atmospheric buoyancy by Friday and
Saturday without significantly moistening the airmass -- i.e.,
displaced away from the core of the moisture source. While
lightning-induced fire ignitions are a distinctive possibility on
the peripheries of rain cores, the increase in  buoyancy will
further aid in vertical plume growth accompanied by  potential
pyrocumulus development and related explosive fire behavior.


$$

ECC030-181645-
Los Angeles County excluding Angeles National Forest-
Discussion for Los Angeles ECC Dispatch
338 PM PDT Sun Aug 17 2025

...LONG DURATION HEATWAVE WITH WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER
CONDITIONS INCLUDING POTENTIAL FOR LARGE PLUME DOMINATED FIRES AWAY
FROM THE COAST FROM WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY...

...FIRE WEATHER WATCH IN EFFECT FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH
SATURDAY EVENING FOR AN UNSEASONABLY HOT AND UNSTABLE AIR MASS
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING EXPLOSIVE FIRE BEHAVIOR FROM VERTICAL PLUME
GROWTH...LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY...AND LOCALLY BREEZY WINDS FOR
PORTIONS OF THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OF LOS ANGELES AND VENTURA
COUNTIES...

There will be gradual warming and drying across the interior on
Monday and Tuesday as upper level high pressure begins to expand
westward. There will be gusty Sundowner winds the next few evenings,
mainly focused from Gaviota to San Marcos Pass. Wind gusts of 35 to
50 mph will be common each evening. While humidity levels will be
elevated this evening, but could lower into the 20 to 40 percent
range on Monday evening and Tuesday evening, thereby increasing the
fire weather concerns for southwest Santa Barbara county.

A long duration heat wave is becoming more likely from Wednesday
through Sunday. With onshore flow expected to be weaker with this
event, heat impacts could potentially spread to inland portions of
the coastal plain. The combination of hot temperatures, low
humidities (including poor overnight recoveries in the mountains and
foothills), instability, locally breezy conditions, and critically
dry fuels away from the coast, will likely bring widespread elevated
fire weather conditions across the valleys, mountains. During the
peak of the heatwave, which will likely be Thursday through
Saturday, temperatures could soar to between 98 and 110 degrees for
the valleys, lower mountains, and deserts, with minimum humidities
generally ranging between 8 and 20  percent, and mixing heights
potentially rising to between 12,000 and 17,000 feet across the
interior. While widespread strong winds are not anticipated with
this upcoming heat wave, the hot temperatures, low humidities,
increased instability, locally breezy conditions (mainly across
mountains, foothills, and canyons), and critically dry fuels will
bring the threat of large plume dominated fires (especially in the
mountains and foothills), capable of rapid growth and extreme fire
behavior. The highest risk areas will be the interior mountains and
foothills of Los Angeles and Ventura counties, as well as Santa
Clarita Valley where a Fire Weather Watch has been issued. The Fire
Weather Watch area covers portions of the mountains and  foothills
of Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which have been a
climatologically notorious area for large plume-dominated fires in
similar weather patterns to what is coming later this week.
Moreover, the western edge of a southwest-states monsoonal moisture
influx will overlie Los Angeles and Ventura Counties,  which will
contribute to the development of atmospheric buoyancy by Friday and
Saturday without significantly moistening the airmass -- i.e.,
displaced away from the core of the moisture source. While
lightning-induced fire ignitions are a distinctive possibility on
the peripheries of rain cores, the increase in  buoyancy will
further aid in vertical plume growth accompanied by  potential
pyrocumulus development and related explosive fire behavior.


$$