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Fatal fires surge as toll grows

- AP

FUELED by the return of strong winds, the wildfires tearing through California wine country exploded in size and number yesterday as authoritie­s ordered new evacuation­s and the death toll climbed to 23 — a figure expected to rise.

Three days after the fires began, firefighte­rs were still unable to gain control of the blazes that had turned entire Northern California neighborho­ods to ash and destroyed at least 3500 homes and businesses.

“We are literally looking at explosive vegetation,” Ken Pimlott, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.

“It is very dynamic. These fires are changing by the minute in many areas.”

The entire historic town of Calistoga, population 5000, was evacuated. In neighborin­g Sonoma County, authoritie­s issued an evacuation advisory for part of the town of Sonoma and the community of Boyes Hot Springs. By that time, the streets were lined with cars packed with people fleeing.

“That’s very bad,” resident Nick Hinman said when a deputy sheriff warned him that the driving winds could shift the wildfires toward the town of Sonoma proper, where 11,000 people live. “It’ll go up like a candle.” Ash rained down on the Sonoma Valley, covering windshield­s, as winds began picking up. Cars of evacuees raced away from the flames while countless emergency vehicles sped toward them, sirens blaring.

Residents manhandled canvas bags into cars jammed with possession­s or filled their gas tanks.

The wildfires are on their way to becoming the deadliest and most destructiv­e in state history. And officials warned the worst was far from over. “Make no mistake, this is a serious, critical, catastroph­ic event,” Mr Pimlott said.

The fires have burned through a staggering 686sq km of urban and rural areas. Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant said 22 wildfires were burning yesterday, up from 17 the day before.

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