Times Colonist

Tornadoes of flame burn California city, 2 dead

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REDDING, California — A wildfire that roared with little warning into a Northern California city claimed two lives as thousands of people scrambled to escape before the walls of flames descended from forested hills onto their neighbourh­oods, officials said on Friday.

Residents who gathered their belongings in haste described a chaotic and congested getaway as the embers blew more than a few kilometres ahead of flames and the fire leaped across the wide Sacramento River and torched subdivisio­ns in Redding, a city of 92,000 about 250 km south of the Oregon border.

“I’ve never experience­d something so terrifying in my life,” said Liz Williams, who loaded up two kids in her car and then found herself locked in bumper-tobumper traffic with neighbours trying to retreat from Lake Redding Estates. She eventually jumped the curb onto the sidewalk and “booked it.”

“I didn’t know if the fire was just going to jump out behind a bush and grab me and suck me in,” Williams said. “I wanted out of here.”

The blaze levelled at least 125 homes, leaving neighbourh­oods smoulderin­g and 37,000 people under evacuation orders.

The flames moved so fast that firefighte­rs working in oven-like temperatur­es and bone-dry conditions had to drop efforts to battle the blaze at one point to help people escape.

The fire, which created at least two flaming tornadoes that toppled trees, shook firefighti­ng equipment and busted truck windows, took “down everything in its path,” said Scott McLean, a spokesman for Cal Fire, the state agency responsibl­e for fighting wildfires.

Fire officials warned that the blaze would probably burn deeper into urban areas before there was any hope of containing it.

The fire was likely to regain strength later in the day when temperatur­es were forecast to spike to about 43 C and winds were expected to kick up.

Redding sits at the northern end of the agricultur­al Central Valley, surrounded by a scenic landscape. Rivers channel abundant winter rainfall into massive reservoirs used for boating and fishing. The area’s stunning mountains, including snowcapped Mount Shasta, topping 4,265 metres, are a playground for outdoor enthusiast­s.

Lightning and even a lawn mower have sparked devastatin­g fires in the forests that ring the peaks and lakes. The blaze that broke out on Monday was caused by a mechanical issue involving a vehicle, officials said.

The fire rapidly expanded on Thursday when erratic flames swept through the historic Gold Rush town of Shasta and nearby Keswick, then cast the Sacramento River in an orange glow as they jumped the banks into Redding.

Steve Hobson, a former firefighte­r, said flames on the distant hillside looked like solar flares.

He had planned to stay behind to save his house on Lake Redding Drive. But the heat burned his skin and smoke made it hard to breathe. He could feel the fire sucking the air from around him, whipping up swirling embers in a “fire tornado,” he said.

He had to drive through walls of flaming embers on both sides of the street when he finally fled. A tree fell right in front of him.

“I didn’t know if I’d make it so I just got in the middle of the street, went down the middle of the street through the embers and the smoke and made it past,” Hobson said.

When he returned Friday, his fence had burned along with a backyard shed and everything inside it. But his house made it through the harrowing night.

Others homes in the haphazard path of destructio­n were not so lucky. Where some houses stood unscathed, single walls or chimneys were all that remained of others. Burned-out skeletons of pickup trucks and VW beetles sat on tireless rims in the ash.

An Associated Press survey found 66 homes destroyed in Hobson’s neighbourh­ood and another 60 gone in Keswick Lake Estates. About 5,000 other buildings were threatened, fire officials said.

Redding fire inspector Jeremy Stoke was killed in the blaze, though no details were offered on what happened to him. A man hired to try to contain the flames with a bulldozer was killed on Thursday, authoritie­s said.

Later, crews found the body of the bulldozer operator who was clearing vegetation in the blaze’s path. He was the second bulldozer operator killed in a California blaze in less than two weeks.

Elsewhere in the state, large fires continued to burn outside Yosemite National Park and in the San Jacinto Mountains east of Los Angeles near Palm Springs.

 ??  ?? A woman surveys damage to her grandmothe­r’s house after a wildfire burned through Redding, California, on Friday. Officials say the erratic wildfire in and around the city is growing rapidly amid scorching temperatur­es, low humidity and windy conditions.
A woman surveys damage to her grandmothe­r’s house after a wildfire burned through Redding, California, on Friday. Officials say the erratic wildfire in and around the city is growing rapidly amid scorching temperatur­es, low humidity and windy conditions.

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