Amanzi wrote:Great pic! Kinda scary looking, its amazing that they can produce lightning!
The heat from the fire forces air to rise, and thusly condense (if there's enough moisture, believe it or not) for the Pyrocumulus cloud to condense. The wildfires in Florida several years ago produced enough rising motion to produce sporadic intense thunderstorms from Pyrocumulus clouds. Lightning, of course, set off new fires, but luckily where it did rain, the storm produced a LOT of it.
Not so in the Western States with T-storm activity usually being the "dry" variety. Unfortunately, a lot of lightning, and very little rain.
SF