Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wildfire’s destructio­n

Second person dies; thousands flee as blaze triples in size

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jonathan J. Cooper, Amanda Lee Myers, Noah Berger, Brian Melley, Olga Rodriguez, Alina Hartounian, Marcio Jose Sanche and John Antczak of The Associated Press; and by Scott Bransford and Matthew Haag of The

A friend consoles Dan Spraggins (right), 79, as they stand in the burned ruins of Spraggins’ home Friday in Redding, Calif., after a wildfire tore through the Northern California city with little warning, forcing thousands of people to flee and destroying at least 500 structures so far. Spraggins said his wife was “not going to be good when I show her pictures of this place.”

REDDING, Calif. — A wildfire that roared with little warning into a Northern California city claimed a second life and thousands more people abandoned their homes, some of them slipping out just ahead of the walls of flame, authoritie­s said Friday.

In all, an estimated 37,000 people have fled from the so-called Carr Fire, which began Monday and tripled in size overnight Thursday amid scorching temperatur­es, low humidity and high winds. Fire officials warned that the blaze would probably burn deeper into urban areas before there was any hope of containing it.

A day earlier, the flames turned the sky orange while sweeping through the historic Gold Rush town of Shasta and nearby Keswick, then jumping the Sacramento River into Redding, a city of about 92,000 people and the largest in the region.

Steve Hobson was one of the last to leave Lake Redding Drive. A former urban and wild land firefighte­r three decades ago, he planned to stay behind to save his house. But the heat burned his skin, and the 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.

Police pounded on doors telling everyone to leave.

The flames on the distant hillside looked like solar flares on the sun, he said. When it came time to flee, he had to punch through walls of burning embers on both sides of the street. 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.

His perimeter fence burned along with a backyard shed and everything inside it — Christmas ornaments, china and old television­s. But his house made it through the harrowing night.

The blaze leveled at least 500 structures, leaving neighborho­ods smoldering. About 5,000 other buildings were threatened, fire officials said.

The fire is “taking down everything in its path,” said Scott McLean, a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman for the crews battling the blaze.

A firefighte­r with the Redding Fire Department was killed in Shasta County. Another firefighte­r hired to try to contain the flames with a bulldozer was killed Thursday, authoritie­s said.

Some Redding residents who had not been under evacuation orders were caught off guard and had to flee with little notice.

“When it hit, people were really scrambling,” McLean said. “There was not much of a warning.”

The blaze, which was apparently sparked by a mechanical issue involving a vehicle, was so fearsome that fire crews in Redding for a time abandoned any hope of containing the flames and instead focused on saving lives.

“We’re not fighting a fire. We’re trying to move people out of the path of it because it is now deadly, and it is now moving at speeds and in ways we have not seen before in this area,” said Jonathan Cox, battalion chief with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Late Thursday, crews found the body of the bulldozer operator who had been hired privately to clear vegetation in the blaze’s path. He was the second bulldozer operator killed in a California blaze in less than two weeks.

“It’s just chaotic. It’s wild,” McLean said. “There’s a lot of fire, a lot of structures burning.”

Firefighte­rs tried in vain to build containmen­t around the blaze Thursday, but flames kept jumping their lines, he said.

Brett Gouvea, incident commander of the crews battling the fire, urged residents to pay close attention to the blaze, which he said was “moving with no regard for what’s in its path.”

At 10:30 p.m. Thursday, a news anchor at KRCR-TV, an ABC-affiliated television station in Redding, abruptly announced that the station was under evacuation orders.

“Right now we are being evacuated, and that’s why we are kind of closing out right now,” said the anchor, Allison Woods. “We are going to leave the station because it is now unsafe to be here.”

The station was streaming its newscast Friday on Twitter.

In addition to the Carr Fire, large wildfires are burning in Central and Southern California. The Ferguson Fire caused the largest closing of Yosemite National Park in 30 years, and the Cranston Fire is only 5 percent contained in the San Jacinto Mountains in Southern California.

A man suspected of starting the Cranston Fire was arrested Wednesday night and charged with five counts of arson to wild land.

 ?? Tribune News Service/Sacramento Bee/HECTOR AMEZCUA ??
Tribune News Service/Sacramento Bee/HECTOR AMEZCUA
 ?? AP/NOAH BERGER ?? A firefighte­r walks past a home Friday in Redding, Calif., that was destroyed by a wildfire.
AP/NOAH BERGER A firefighte­r walks past a home Friday in Redding, Calif., that was destroyed by a wildfire.
 ?? AP/NOAH BERGER ?? Officials said the fire in Redding leveled at least 500 structures, leaving scenes of destructio­n behind.
AP/NOAH BERGER Officials said the fire in Redding leveled at least 500 structures, leaving scenes of destructio­n behind.
 ??  ?? Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service

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