Thousands
flee California wildfire as homes go up in flames
14
September, 2015
A
swiftly spreading wildfire destroyed hundreds of homes and forced
thousands of residents to flee as it roared unchecked through the
northern California village of Middletown and nearby communities,
fire officials said on Sunday.
The
so-called Valley Fire, now ranked as the most destructive among
scores of blazes that have ravaged the drought-stricken Western
United States this summer, came amid what California fire officials
described as "unheard of fire behavior" this season.
The
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) put
the total number of Valley Fire evacuees on Sunday night at more than
19,300.
A
separate fire raging since Wednesday in the western Sierras has
leveled more than 130 buildings and was threatening about 6,400 other
structures, with thousands of residents under evacuation orders
there, too, Cal Fire reported.
Governor
Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency in both areas, and
mandatory evacuations were expanded as shifting winds sent flames and
ash from the Valley Fire toward a cluster of towns in the hills north
of Napa Valley wine country.
Reuters
video footage from Middletown showed a smoking, devastated landscape
of blackened, burned-out vehicles and the charred foundations of
buildings that had been reduced to ash.
"While
crews have not had a chance to do a full damage assessment ... we
know hundreds of structures have been destroyed," Cal Fire
spokesman Daniel Berlant said in a Twitter post.
Property
losses included "countless homes and other buildings," he
added in a subsequent video news briefing.
The
Valley Fire has consumed more than 50,000 acres (20,200 hectares)
since igniting Saturday in rural Lake County, California, about 50
miles (80 kms) west of Sacramento, the state capital, fire officials
said on Sunday.
Thousands
of evacuees from Middletown, Cobb, Hidden Valley Lake and the Harbin
Hot Springs resort gathered in shelters, restaurants and friends'
houses in nearby Kelseyville and Calistoga to await word on their
homes, horses and dogs.
The
mountain town of Cobb was hit first Saturday afternoon, and the blaze
reached Middletown before sunset a few hours later, Cal Fire
spokeswoman Amy Head told Reuters. The two communities, each with a
population of roughly 1,500, were among the areas that bore the brunt
of the flames.
A
combination of drought and a heat wave last week had left vegetation
tinder dry and highly combustible, setting the stage for a
conflagration that thwarted the best efforts of firefighters to
contain it, Berlant said.
"Every
time they made progress, the fire would burn right past them,"
he said, adding that embers carried by the wind were sparking new
blazes and enlarging the fire one.
ELATED VIDEO - California
firefighters injured battling blaze
During
its first 12 hours, the blaze had devoured 40,000 acres of forest,
brush and grasslands at what Head called an "unprecedented rate"
of spread for a wildfire.
Four
firefighters were hospitalized with second-degree burns in the early
hours of the blaze and were listed in stable condition on Sunday, but
no other casualties were reported, Head said. Thick smoke later kept
water-dropping helicopters and airplane tankers grounded, she said.
'FLAMES
ALL AROUND'
Laura
Streblow, 27, an evacuee who fled Hidden Valley Lake with her
boyfriend on Saturday night and was tracking developments on social
media and through friends, told Reuters she had heard that
"Middletown is basically gone."
"I
saw flames all around ... The wind was insane. I have never been so
scared," she said.
Mark
Donpineo, 54, said he and two friends were trapped by the fire for
four hours Saturday evening at a golf course in Hidden Valley Lake,
taking cover in a culvert until the flames had passed.
"We
got some towels, wetted them down and basically saw the fire coming.
You could hear explosions of propane tanks, the ridge was totally on
fire, trees were blowing up," he said.
Meanwhile,
Cal Fire reported that 81 homes and 51 outbuildings had been lost in
the four-day-old Butte Fire, which has charred more than 65,000 acres
in the mountains east of Sacramento but was 20 percent contained.
As
of Sunday, firefighters were battling nearly three dozen large blazes
or clusters of fires in California and six other Western states,
according to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.
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