Wildfires increasingly occur under conditions of extreme atmospheric dryness, low relative humidity, and suppressed cloud formation. Traditional cloud seeding techniques depend on the presence of pre-existing cloud structures and therefore have limited applicability in fire-prone environments. This concept paper proposes a two-stage atmospheric intervention framework: Cloud Knitting – a distributed aerial method designed to assemble weak moisture pockets into coherent, persistent cloud structures using gentle vertical persistence and humidity enhancement. Selective Cloud Seeding – applied only once cloud formation thresholds are met. The approach does not attempt to force weather but instead seeks to support natural atmospheric tendencies, increasing humidity, cloud cover, and precipitation probability under suitable conditions.
Danielle Matyevich (Sun,) studied this question.