Woodstock Fire Department: Don't Burn Tuesday — Dangerous Fire Conditions Expected Through Evening
Low humidity and gusty winds create dangerous burning conditions across North Georgia, including Cherokee County
Woodstock Community News Staff
The Woodstock Fire Department is urging residents to hold off on any outdoor burning Tuesday, March 24, 2026, as hazardous fire weather conditions are expected to grip North Georgia — including Cherokee County — from the afternoon through the evening hours.
The warning centers on plummeting humidity. Forecasters expect relative humidity to drop to 25 percent or below for at least four consecutive hours, a threshold that dries out vegetation rapidly and makes fires far easier to start and far harder to stop. Layer in easterly winds of 7 to 10 mph with gusts reaching 15 to 20 mph, and the conditions become genuinely dangerous — strong enough to carry embers across property lines and push flames through the dry brush, leaf litter, and dormant grass that blanket Cherokee County's wooded neighborhoods and undeveloped hillsides this time of year.
The department's message is unambiguous: it is best not to burn at all. For residents who proceed anyway, the advisory calls for extreme caution — keep a water hose, rake, hoe, or shovel within arm's reach at all times, and never walk away from an active fire. What starts as a small debris pile can become a running grass fire in minutes when wind and low humidity conspire.
That combination is exactly what makes early spring the most treacherous season for wildfires across North Georgia. Winter-killed vegetation hasn't yet given way to green growth, leaving the landscape covered in months' worth of dry fuel. A single escaped burn pile, a tossed cigarette, or a wayward ember can ignite a fire that spreads faster than crews can contain it — straining the same firefighters who also respond to medical emergencies and structure fires across a rapidly growing community.
The Woodstock Fire Department has protected this community since 1941, when Woodstock was a small railroad town a long way from the sprawling city it is today. Cherokee County's population has grown dramatically over the past two decades, pushing residential development deeper into the wooded terrain that surrounds the city — terrain that burns. That growth makes public fire safety warnings more consequential, not less.
Residents with questions about outdoor burning regulations in the City of Woodstock or unincorporated Cherokee County can contact the Woodstock Fire Department directly. The Georgia Forestry Commission's website also tracks current fire weather conditions and any active burn bans across the state — a useful resource before striking a match any time of year.