Hartford Courant

Western wildfires

- By Terence Chea, Ethan Swope and John Antczak

Wind-driven wildfires rage amid drought across Northern California.

GRIZZLY FLATS, Calif. — Wind-driven wildfires raged Wednesday through drought-stricken forests in the mountains of Northern California after incinerati­ng hundreds of homes and forcing thousands of people to flee to safety.

A reversal of wind direction was expected to test some previously quiet fire containmen­t lines, but also push flames back in other areas, authoritie­s said.

The newest inferno, the Caldor Fire, continued to grow explosivel­y in the Sierra Nevada southwest of Lake Tahoe, covering 84 square miles after ravaging Grizzly Flats, a community of about 1,200.

At least 50 homes burned there, but tallies were incomplete because officials had not been able to make thorough assessment­s of the damage in Grizzly Flats.

Two people were hospitaliz­ed with serious injuries Tuesday, and about 5,900 homes and other structures were threatened by the fire.

In the Sierra-cascades region about 100 miles to the north, the month-old Dixie Fire expanded by thousands of acres to 993 square miles — two weeks after the blaze gutted the Gold Rush-era town of Greenville.

About 16,000 homes and buildings were threatened by the Dixie Fire, named for the road where it started.

“It’s a pretty good size monster,” Mark Brunton, a firefighti­ng operations section chief, said in a briefing.

“We’re not going to get this thing overnight,” he said. “It’s going to be a work in progress — eating the elephant one bite at a time kind of thing — and it’s going to be a long-haul mindset. It’s a marathon and not a sprint.”

The Caldor and Dixie fires are among a dozen large wildfires in the northern half of California.

In contrast, Southern California has had few wildfires recently.

Moist ocean air even ushered in occasional drizzle or light rain Wednesday in Southern California.

But Northern California’s wildfires have left scenes of utter devastatio­n.

Few homes were left standing in Grizzly Flats, where streets were littered with downed power lines and poles. Houses were reduced to smoldering ash and twisted metal with only chimneys rising above the ruins. A post office and elementary school were destroyed.

Hulks of gutted vehicles littered the ruins and the skeletons of chairs stood in rows among the ashes of a church.

Derek Shaves, who fled Grizzly Flats late Monday, said he visited the next day, finding that his home and most of the houses in his neighborho­od were gone.

“It’s a pile of ash,” he said. “Everybody on my block is a pile of ash and every block that I visited — but for five separate homes that were safe — was totally devastated.”

All 7,000 residents of the town of Pollock Pines were ordered to evacuate because of the fire.

To the north at the Dixie Fire, numerous firefighti­ng resources were deployed into the area of Susanville, a city of 18,000, where residents have been warned to be ready to evacuate.

 ?? ETHAN SWOPE/AP ?? Ava Robol, 7, and Josephine Delarosa, 2, arrive Wednesday at the Green Valley Community Church evacuation shelter in Placervill­e, Calif., after fleeing the Caldor Fire.
ETHAN SWOPE/AP Ava Robol, 7, and Josephine Delarosa, 2, arrive Wednesday at the Green Valley Community Church evacuation shelter in Placervill­e, Calif., after fleeing the Caldor Fire.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States