Muscat Daily

Thousands flee California wildfires after they spread to San Diego

Nearly 700 structures have been destroyed by wildfires raging on six different fronts

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Bonsall, US - Thousands of firefighte­rs battled raging wildfires in California on Saturday that have forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee the Los Angeles area, as well as outbreaks closer to San Diego.

Nearly 700 structures including multi-million dollar mansions have been destroyed by wildfires raging on six different fronts, but despite the intensity of the blazes, authoritie­s have reported only one fatality.

Black smoke billowed through the region, gagging residents who ventured outdoors.

“I’ve never seen anything like this and I’ve lived here 20 years,” Judy Herman (76) said.

Herman was relieved to find her home in Murrieta, east of Los Angeles, still intact. It was part of the huge evacuation zone forced by the ‘Liberty’ fire - which included many ranches in the area, where rodeos are popular.

Meanwhile, since erupting in Ventura county on Monday, the so-called ‘Thomas’ fire has ravaged 57870 hectares.

With gusts of up to 96km per hour, the turbulent seasonal Santa Ana winds whipped the fire on Friday, spitting embers and creating ‘extreme fire danger’.

A red alert was extended into the weekend due to expected low humidity.

Further south in San Diego county the ‘Lilac’ fire was ballooning at a dangerous rate, charring more than 1618 hectares after igniting on Thursday morning and triggering a new wave of evacuation­s as it encroached on the university town of Santa Barbara.

The plumes of smoke and flames left at least four people in the area injured from burns or smoke inhalation.

Flames also claimed the lives of more than two dozen racehorses after tearing through eight barns at the normally serene San Luis Rey training center, in the town of Bonsall, where some 500 horses were stabled, the California Horse Racing Board said in a statement.

“Seventy-five per cent of the stables were consumed, the fire was spreading so fast... they couldn’t evacuate all the horses,” fire chief Ross Fowler said. “It’s hard when horses are scared, they don’t comply, they are heavy, they can hurt you.”

In Fallbrook, northern San Diego county, the scene was apocalypti­c. With ravaged trees lying horizontal and houses destroyed, everything was black as firefighte­rs inspected for possible sources for a new blaze.

Taking advantage of a lull in the wind, they also blasted water on homes affected in both towns.

Meanwhile, firefighte­rs also got something of a handle on the ‘Skirball’ fire in Los Angeles, which had spewed rivers of flames over 202 hectares in the densely populated area of Bel Air, engulfing entire hillsides.

Multi-million dollar mansions were destroyed in the neighbourh­ood, home to many celebritie­s. Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch has a US$30mn estate, the Moraga Bel Air Winery, there.

Another Los Angeles county blaze, the ‘Rye’ fire, has consumed more than 2428 hectares and was 50 per cent contained, while the ‘Creek’ fire - the largest wildfire menacing the LA region - had grown to more than 6070.2846 hectares and destroyed more than 100 structures, over half of them residentia­l.

The ‘Liberty’ wildfire in Riverside county east of Los Angeles, America’s second largest city, has scorched 121.406 hectares and was just ten per cent contained.

US President Donald Trump issued a state of emergency in California, authorisin­g the release of federal funds to ‘help alleviate the hardship and suffering that the emergency may inflict on the local population’. However, several evacuation orders were lifted on Friday afternoon.

This has been California’s deadliest year ever for wildfires. More than 40 people died in October when fires swept through counties north of San Francisco.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A firefighte­r keeps an eye on a burning fire off Highway 33 north of Ojai, California on Friday
(AFP) A firefighte­r keeps an eye on a burning fire off Highway 33 north of Ojai, California on Friday

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