Medicine Hat News

California wildfires leave chimneys, charred appliances in their wake

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SANTA ROSA, Calif. The flames that raced across California wine country left little more than smoulderin­g ashes and eye-stinging smoke in their wake. House after house is gone, with only brick chimneys and charred laundry machines to mark sites that were once family homes.

The wildfires burned so hot that windows and tire rims melted off cars, leaving many vehicles resting on their steel axles. In one driveway, the glass backboard of a basketball hoop melted, dripped and solidified like a mangled icicle.

Newly homeless residents of Northern California took stock of their shattered lives Tuesday while the blazes that have killed at least 15 people and destroyed more than 2,000 homes and businesses kept burning. Hundreds more firefighte­rs joined the battle against the uncontaine­d flames.

“This is just pure devastatio­n, and it’s going to take us a while to get out and comb through all of this,” said Ken Pimlott, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. He said the state had “several days of fire weather conditions to come.”

The wildfires already rank among the five deadliest in California history, and officials expected the death toll to increase as the scope of destructio­n becomes clear. At least 185 people were injured during the blazes that started Sunday night. Nearly 200 people were reported missing in Sonoma County alone.

Seventeen wildfires raged Tuesday across parts of seven counties. Fire crews and other resources were being rushed in from other parts of the state and Nevada.

More than 240 members of the California National Guard helped ferry fuel to first responders because so many gas stations were without power. Guard members were also helping with medical evacuation­s and security at evacuation centres, said Maj. Gen. David Baldwin.

In addition to knocking out electricit­y, the blazes damaged or destroyed 77 cellular sites, disrupting communicat­ion services that officials were rushing to restore, said Emergency Operations Director Mark Ghilarducc­i.

The fires that started Sunday night moved so quickly that thousands of people were forced to flee with only a few minutes of warning. Some did not get out in time.

“It’s literally like it exploded. These people ran out of their homes literally with minutes notice, barely with the clothes on their back,” Pimlott said, adding that authoritie­s didn’t have time to give more notice. “They burned so quickly, there was not time to notify everybody.”

Among the victims were 100-year-old Charles Rippey and his wife, Sara, who was 98. The couple was married for 75 years and lived in a residentia­l neighbourh­ood in Napa.

Their son, Mike Rippey, said he and his siblings couldn’t imagine how either parent would have navigated life if just one had survived the flames.

“We knew there’s no way they would ever be happy, whoever was the last one. So they went together, and that’s the way it worked,” he said stoically.

A thick, smoky haze cloaked much of Napa and Sonoma counties, where neighbourh­oods hit by the fires were completely levelled. Authoritie­s warned residents not to return to their houses for safety reasons, citing the risk of exposed electrical and gas lines and unstable structures including trees.

About 3,200 people were staying in 28 shelters across Napa and Sonoma counties.

 ?? AP PHOTO JEFF CHIU ?? The sun shines through smoke and haze from wildfires over Santa Rosa, Calif., Tuesday.
AP PHOTO JEFF CHIU The sun shines through smoke and haze from wildfires over Santa Rosa, Calif., Tuesday.

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