Lodi News-Sentinel

Yosemite Valley closed as deadly wildfire expands

Park visitors ordered to leave as heavy smoke fills area

- By Angel Jennings

LOS ANGELES — A stream of cars, campers and trailers flowed out of Yosemite National Park on Wednesday morning as the deadly Ferguson Fire inched ever closer and prompted officials to order areas of the park closed.

Visitors were given until noon Wednesday to evacuate Yosemite Valley, the heart of the 1,200-square-mile park. Officials have also closed Highway 41, the north-south artery that carries travelers from Southern California to Yosemite, and Glacier Point Road.

The areas are expected to reopen Sunday, according to officials.

The Ferguson Fire, which has raged west of Yosemite since July 13, grew to 38,000 acres as of Wednesday and was 25 percent contained. At its closest point, the fire is two miles from the park, Yosemite spokesman Scott Gediman said.

Heavy smoke from the blaze has blanketed the valley and created air quality conditions worse than in Beijing, China’s heavily polluted capital, he said.

“With this hot, dry weather pattern you just got the smoke sitting here,” Gediman said. “The air quality fluctuates throughout the day but it’s really poor midday — noon to 6 p.m.”

Officials have been handing out high-grade filtration masks and set up “clean air” centers around the park where employees and visitors can get a break from the smoke-filled air, Gediman said. Still, after days in the smoke, Gediman said his voice has become raspy and he feels a dryness in his throat.

On Tuesday night, officials taped evacuation notices on hotel doors and campers. Even before the order went out, however, visitors had begun packing up when they saw dark clouds of smoke filling the sky.

“It’s not a panic situation,” Gediman said. “The fire is not in Yosemite National Park. There are no flames in the park.”

Two areas in the northern part of the park, Tuolumne Meadows and Hetch Hetchy, remain open.

For the last few days, an inversion layer of warm air has kept the fire relatively calm. But in the early hours Tuesday, fire officials said, a shift in the winds pushed the fire into an area with many dead trees. That sent embers flying past the firefighte­rs’ break line, sparking several spot fires that grew into a large fire of more than 500 acres, according to U.S. Forest Service spokesman Jim Mackensen.

The unexpected fire behavior prompted officials to order mandatory evacuation­s in the Lushmeadow­s area of Mariposa County.

“It’s like in a fireplace,” Mackensen said. “You close that damper. There’s no smoke going up. It just kind of hangs and fills the house full of smoke. But you open that damper and a window and the heat from the fire goes roaring up the chimney. It pulls in fresh air from the bottom and the fire starts to breathe again. That’s essentiall­y what happened today.”

More than 3,000 people are battling the blaze, aided by dozens of water-dropping helicopter­s, water trucks and bulldozers.

One of the biggest challenges in fighting the Ferguson Fire is the terrain. Steep inclines and rocky canyons have made it difficult to approach some portions of the fire.

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