Los Angeles Times

As forests go up in smoke, so will California’s climate plan

The General Sherman giant sequoia, center, is inspected by National Park Service public information officers during a tour of the KNP Complex fire burn area around Giant Forest Thursday, Sept. 30, 2021, in Sequoia National Park, California.

LOS ANGELES — When lightning ignited the bone-dry foothills of the Sierra Nevada last year, forestry crews fanned out across Sequoia National Park to defend an ancient grove of California redwoods from wildfire.

As smoke wafted through a forest of giant sequoias, a dozen crew members surrounded the gargantuan, 36-foot-wide trunk of General Sherman — the world’s largest living tree — and wrapped its base with massive sheets of fire-resistant fabric.

The rescue was a stark acknowledgment that California wildfires are burning faster and hotter than ever before, and now threaten a species that had adapted comfortably to the fires of a previous age.

“I think if you told someone 30 years ago that we were going to do that they would

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