The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘The fire is crawling along ’

Crews stop spread of huge California wildfire near Yosemite

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LOS ANGELES — Crews contending with triple-digit temperatur­es slowed the spread of an aggressive wildfire that destroyed dozens of homes in a rural area of California near Yosemite National Park, officials said Sunday.

The blaze burning for a week has scorched just over 305 square kilometres of dense brush and dead trees in the Sierra Nevada foothills. Many evacuated residents were allowed to return, but flames continue to threaten about 1,500 homes in Mariposa County.

The fire was 40 per cent contained, but officials said it could take crews another two weeks to fully surround it.

“They are still out in front of an uncontroll­ed fire, but the fire isn’t moving at 48 kph. The fire is crawling along,” fire spokesman Brandon Vaccaro said Saturday. Flames spared Mariposa, a historic Gold Rush-era town, but more than 60 nearby homes and about 64 other buildings were destroyed.

Nearly 4,500 firefighte­rs fought the blaze using air tankers and fleets of helicopter­s and bulldozers.

The fire grew by up to 122 sq. km a day at its peak. But by the weekend, the growth rate was slowed despite dry, blistering weather, Vaccaro said.

The smoke blurred the scenic vistas of Yosemite National Park, about 56 km west of the fire. Tourists expecting the grandeur of falls and granite peaks instead saw hazy grey silhouette­s.

Some roads remained closed. But Mariposa, with a population of about 2,000, was coming back to life.

Steve Valdez was back at work Saturday at a hardware store despite losing his home of 17 years to the fire.

“There are people out there who depend upon us to get power, to get water, to get their equipment fixed,” he said.

Valdez, 60, and his wife had 20 minutes to grab a few photograph­s, bills and some family Bibles before they fled the encroachin­g flames. When they returned, only the home’s chimney was still standing. They plan to rebuild.

The fire was one of more than a dozen that have ravaged California in recent weeks.

To the south, officials have finally lifted all remaining evacuation­s in a stubborn fire burning for more than two weeks in the mountains of Santa Barbara County. The blaze, which destroyed 16 homes, is 87 per cent and hasn’t grown in size for several days. The Associated Press

 ?? SCOTT SMITH/AP PHOTO ?? Mariposa normally bustles with tourists on their way to Yosemite National Park. The town’s centre is made up of old brick and wooden buildings in the holding modern clothing and gift shops, restaurant­s and wine bars.
SCOTT SMITH/AP PHOTO Mariposa normally bustles with tourists on their way to Yosemite National Park. The town’s centre is made up of old brick and wooden buildings in the holding modern clothing and gift shops, restaurant­s and wine bars.

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