California has been between a rock and a hard place this year.
CalFire submitted requests for 20-30,000 acres of controlled burn. CARB shot that down to 1100 acres. Then, the plague hit.
The smart people ciphered it and said that California eeded about 1,000,000 acres torched in controlled burns. Which sounds rather huge at first blush. Except California has about 99 million acres of land area. So, about 1% was the recoended burn area.
And, yes, the US is huge. Let's look at Texas. 800 miles north to south and 800 miles east to west. About square miles. And a population about the same as Australia (and a tenth the size, really round numbers). Over at the NE corner, Texarcana, is about 800 iles south of Chicago. Off to the west, El Paso is about 800 miles east of LA.
So, weather in one area is nothing like weather in another. We are celebrating Labour Day this weekend in the US. Our UK friends will better understand this as a "bank" holiday. For a portion of the US, it's the end of Summer, and the beginning of fall (those places are generally above about 36ºN latitude). Here in Texas is means the temepratures will have oderated gtom high 90s to only mid 90s. Our "fall" occurs closer to Novemeber. In Montana, it means that snow is possible any day.
It's an aazing thing.