Albuquerque Journal

New wildfires erupt near LA, Santa Cruz

Headway made on wine country fires

- BY SUDHIN THANAWALA AND TERRY CHEA

SANTA ROSA, Calif. — As crews gained on the wildfires in California wine country, new blazes broke out in other parts of the state, including a fire in the mountains above Los Angeles that threatened a historic observator­y Tuesday and more flames in the Santa Cruz mountains.

Firefighte­rs on the ground and in the air raced to protect the Mount Wilson Observator­y and nearby communicat­ions towers from a growing brush fire northeast of LA. The blaze was initially estimated at around 5 acres (2 hectares). The observator­y, which has been evacuated, opened in 1917 and houses the 100inch Hooker Telescope, one of the most advanced telescopes of the first half of the 20th century.

Farther north, a fire that sprang up late Monday in the mountains of the southern Bay Area blackened at least 150 acres and threatened 150 homes, which prompted evacuation orders. Smoke was descending into the coastal beach town of Santa Cruz.

Winds remained light, but conditions were also dry. Crews dropped water on the blaze, which started as a structure fire of some kind.

“The idea is to hit it pretty hard with aircraft and hit it with ground resources at the same time,” said Rob Sherman, a division chief at the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Five firefighte­rs suffered minor injuries, including one who slipped down a ravine.

In the state’s wine-making region, tens of thousands of people began drifting back to their neighborho­ods. Some returned to find their homes gone.

The deadliest wildfires in California history have been burning for more than a week, killing at least 41 people and destroying nearly 6,000 homes. About 34,000 people remained under evacuation Tuesday, down from 40,000 on Monday.

“It’s never going to be the same,” said Rob Brown, a supervisor in Mendocino County, where all 8,000 evacuees were cleared to go home Monday. “You’re going to have to seek a new normal.”

The thousands of calls coming from concerned residents in neighborin­g Sonoma County “have shifted from questions about evacuation to questions about coping,” Sonoma County Supervisor Shirlee Zane said.

“Many people who call are sad and worried. The shock has worn off,” and depression is setting in.

As a former grief therapist, she advised people with a family member or loved one who has lost everything to understand they can’t fix this but they can offer support.

“Provide a compassion­ate listening ear right now, and let them feel whatever they’re feeling,” Zane said.

And those who must rebuild from nothing are in for a changed life.

“You’re in for decades,” Brown said. “You’ll see benefits within years, but you’re literally in for decades of recovery.”

Jennifer Kelly and her husband and three sons lost their home and everything in it to a fire in Middletown in Lake County two years ago.

 ?? DAVID CRANE/LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS ?? A fire burns near the summit of Mount Wilson early Tuesday northeast of Los Angles. Firefighte­rs raced to protect the Mount Wilson Observator­y and nearby communicat­ions towers from a growing brush fire.
DAVID CRANE/LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS A fire burns near the summit of Mount Wilson early Tuesday northeast of Los Angles. Firefighte­rs raced to protect the Mount Wilson Observator­y and nearby communicat­ions towers from a growing brush fire.

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