Connecticut Post

Wildfires tear through parts of the West

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LAGUNA NIGUEL, Calif. — Wildfires are on a furious pace early this year — from a California hilltop where mansions with multimilli­on-dollar Pacific Ocean views were torched to remote New Mexico mountains charred by a monthold monster blaze.

The two places could not be more different, but the elements in common are the same: wind-driven flames have torn through vegetation that is extraordin­arily dry from years-long drought exacerbate­d by climate change.

As the unstoppabl­e northern New Mexico wildfire chewed through more dense forest Thursday, firefighte­rs in the coastal community of Laguna Niguel doused charred and smoldering remains of 20 large homes that quickly went up in flames and forced a frantic evacuation.

“The sky, everything was orange. It looked like an inferno, so we just jumped in the car,” Sassan Darian said, as he recounted fleeing with his daughter and father while embers swirled around them. “My daughter said, ‘We’re on fire.’ There were sparks on her and we were patting ourselves down.”

Nationwide, more than 2,000 square miles have burned so far this year — the most at this point since 2018, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center. Prediction­s for the rest of the spring do not bode well for the West, with the drought and warmer weather brought on by climate change worsening wildfire danger.

“We all know it’s really early for our fire season and we’re all in awe of what we’ve already experience­d … to this point,” said Dave Bales, commander on the New Mexico fire that is the largest burning in the U.S.

Fire officials said there’s not much they could do to stop the fast-moving flames burning in tinder-dry forests in the Sangre de Christo range. It’s simply too dangerous to put firefighte­rs ahead of a blaze that’s moving this hard and fast through overgrown mountainsi­des covered with Ponderosa pine and other trees sucked dry of moisture over decades.

Even small fires that once would have been easily contained are extreme threats to life and property because of climate change, said Brian Fennessy, chief of the Orange County Fire Authority.

The perfect example broke out Wednesday afternoon when flames that may have been sparked by electric utility equipment were pushed up a canyon by strong sea breezes and quickly ignited large homes. They burned a relatively small area — about 200 acres — but left a large path of destructio­n.

A sprawling estate selling for $9.9 million had looked in real estate listings like a California dream: teeming with luxuries that included a two-level library, a “wellness wing” with sauna and steam room and a pool on a terrace overlookin­g scenic Laguna Beach.

By nightfall, the mansion once photograph­ed against a pastel sunset had morphed into a nightmare: its arched facade silhouette­d against a glowing yellow sky as firefighte­rs trained their hoses on the engulfed structure.

After the big flames died down Thursday, the house was one of many smoking casualties marked off with yellow tape. In another driveway, a burned-out car rested on its rims. The steep surroundin­g hillsides were blackened and stripped of vegetation.

Many other homes appeared unscathed and palm trees that had survived the onslaught of embers swayed above in calmer winds.

Two firefighte­rs were hospitaliz­ed but no other injuries were reported.

The fire’s cause was under investigat­ion and damage inspection­s were still ongoing on Thursday, Orange County Fire Authority Assistant Chief T.J. McGovern said.

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