El Dorado News-Times

In the inferno

- (AP Photo/ Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Jesse Vasquez, of the San Bernardino County Fire Department, hoses down hot spots from the Bobcat Fire on Saturday in Valyermo, Calif.

LOS ANGELES — The destructio­n wrought by a wind-driven wildfire in the mountains northeast of Los Angeles approached 156 square miles Sunday, burning structures, homes and a nature center in a famed Southern California wildlife sanctuary in foothill desert communitie­s.

Firefighte­rs were, however, able to defend Mount Wilson, which overlooks greater Los Angeles in the San Gabriel Mountains and has a historic observator­y founded more than a century ago and numerous broadcast antennas serving Southern California, from the Bobcat Fire.

The Bobcat Fire started Sept. 6 and has already doubled in size over the last week — becoming one of Los Angeles County's largest wildfires in history, according to the Los Angeles Times. No injuries have been reported.

The blaze is 15% contained as teams attempt to determine the scope of the destructio­n in the area about 50 miles northeast of downtown LA. Thousands of residents in the foothill communitie­s of the Antelope Valley were ordered to evacuate Saturday as winds pushed the flames into Juniper Hills.

Roland Pagan watched his Juniper Hills house burn through binoculars as he stood on a nearby hill, according to the Los Angeles Times .

“The ferocity of this fire was shocking,” Pagan, 80, told the newspaper. “It burned my house alive in just 20 minutes.”

Resident Perry Chamberlai­n evacuated initially but returned to extinguish a fire inside his storage container, according to the Southern California News Group, and ended up helping others put out a small fire in their horse stall.

Chamberlai­n said Juniper Hills had been like a majestic “sylvan forest” but the fire burned the Juniper and sage brush and a variety of trees.

“It used to be Juniper Hills,” he said. “Now it's just Hills.”

The wildfire also destroyed the nature center at Devil's Punchbowl Natural Area, a geological wonder that attracts some 130,000 visitors per year.

Though the Bobcat Fire neared the high desert community of Valyermo, a Benedictin­e monastery there appeared to have escaped major damage, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Statewide, nearly 19,000 firefighte­rs continue to fight more than two dozen major wildfires. More than 7,900 wildfires have burned more than 5,468 square miles in California this year, including many since a mid-August barrage of dry lightning ignited parched vegetation.

Meanwhile, officials were investigat­ing the death of a firefighte­r on the lines of another Southern California wildfire that erupted earlier this month from a smoke-generating pyrotechni­c device used by a couple to reveal their baby's gender.

The death occurred Thursday in San Bernardino National Forest as crews battled the El Dorado Fire about 75 miles east of Los Angeles, the U.S. Forest Service said in a statement.

The name of the firefighte­r killed has not yet been released. A statement from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire, said it was the 26th death involving wildfires besieging the state.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A homeowner, wishing not to be identified, stands in front of his fire-ravaged home Saturday after the Bobcat Fired passed through in Juniper Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/ Marcio Jose Sanchez)
A homeowner, wishing not to be identified, stands in front of his fire-ravaged home Saturday after the Bobcat Fired passed through in Juniper Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/ Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States