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It's So Hot, The Cactus Are Burning

This photo of a cactus on fire, taken by Fountain Hills, Ariz. resident Marianne Abrahamson, went viral on Facebook.
This photo of a cactus on fire, taken by Fountain Hills, Ariz. resident Marianne Abrahamson, went viral on Facebook.

It’s 113 degrees in Phoenix today, and that’s in the shade. There’s all the usual descriptions: Hot enough to fry an egg, hotter than hell, and all the "It's so hot …" bad jokes.

But I just saw a new one with photographic evidence: “It’s so hot, the saguaros are catching fire.”

This photo is floating on several Facebook pages. At first I thought it was Photoshopped. Saguaros don’t catch fire. They are made up of 80-90 percent water. They can lose 60 percent of their water and survive.

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They may blow up when hit by lightning, but they don’t burn. (Yes, dried-out saguaro skeletons burn, but this one appears to be live.)

The most likely explanation is that this isn’t actually a cactus, but a cell tower built to look like a cactus. Companies do that to make them a little less obtrusive. And the towers do catch fire.

As a journalist there are several questions about this original photo: the location, the circumstances, was it really a saguaro?

On the other hand, it is 113 degrees (did I mention that’s in the shade?) and people are talking about the heat. But even if it’s 133 degrees (in the shade), saguaros do not spontaneously combust.

So while I await the answers to my questions, I’ll share the “Burning Cactus” photo.