Los Angeles Times

CARR FIRE RAGES ON

Fueled by wind and heat, fast-moving blaze claims three more lives

- By Ruben Vives and Harriet Ryan

REDDING — Two young children and their greatgrand­mother are the latest victims of a massive and fast-moving wildfire in Shasta County that officials acknowledg­ed Saturday they were making little progress in controllin­g.

Melody Bledsoe, 70, and her great-grandchild­ren, Emily Roberts, 5, and James Roberts, 4, died when their Redding home burned Thursday night, their family said. The death toll from the blaze known as the Carr fire stands at five with more than a dozen other residents reported missing.

With the unyielding 100plus degree temperatur­es and bone-dry vegetation, authoritie­s said there was no end in sight to the fire and expressed particular alarm about its rapid expansion. Between Friday night and Saturday morning, the fire doubled in size to more than 80,000 acres with only 5% containmen­t. Despite the efforts of 3,400 firefighte­rs aided by bulldozers and helicopter­s throughout the day, the blaze continued spreading toward residentia­l areas west and south of downtown Redding.

“We understand the anxiety you are going through,” Shasta County Fire Chief Mike Hebrard told the community at an afternoon briefing. “We are doing everything in our power to bring an end to this chaos.”

The deaths of Bledsoe and the Roberts children

underscore­d one of the fire’s most devastatin­g features — speed.

Bledsoe’s granddaugh­ter Amanda Woodley confirmed the news about their deaths Saturday afternoon in a public Facebook post written just after she left the Shasta County Sheriff ’s Office.

Woodley said Bledsoe did everything she could to save the children.

“She was hovered over them both with a wet blanket,” she wrote.

“My heart is crushed,” she said. “I can’t believe this is real. I just keep seeing all of their beautiful faces.”

Bledsoe and her two great-grandchild­ren were reported missing late Friday by a family friend. They hadn’t been seen since their Redding home burned Thursday night.

Bledsoe’s husband, Ed Bledsoe, wasn’t home when the fire struck, according to an online fundraiser site created by another family member.

The family did not believe their home was under evacuation, and Ed went out to get supplies. The family was renting and did not have insurance.

According to news reports, the children called their great-grandfathe­r while he was at the store saying the fire was approachin­g.

Speaking to the Sacramento Bee, Ed Bledsoe wept as he recounted trying to get back to the house.

“God almighty, I don’t know what I done wrong,” he said. “I talked to them until the fire got them.”

Shasta County Sheriff Tom Bosenko said no bodies had been found yet, but his investigat­ors are “overwhelmi­ngly sure that there are decedents at the scene.” He said access to the home has been difficult as the walls collapsed during the fire.

The fire, started Monday by a vehicle mechanical failure on Route 299, previously claimed the lives of Redding fire inspector Jeremy Stoke and bulldozer operator Don Ray Smith.

In responding to questions about the Bledsoe family’s fate, the sheriff implored residents to promptly obey evacuation orders.

More than 38,000 people have been displaced due to the mandatory orders.

The sheriff said 260 National Guard soldiers called into the area Saturday will help staff roadblocks to keep residents from danger and assist local law enforcemen­t in ensuring those ordered to leave do so.

Authoritie­s are investigat­ing 13 other missing persons cases connected to the fire. Redding police Sgt. Todd Cogle said that there are indication­s that some reported missing are safe. When officers went to their addresses, he said, they found homes still standing and doors locked. In some cases, he said, people may have fled their homes without cellphones and might be unable to connect with relatives.

“My hope is that we are able to find all of them eventually, however, the possibilit­y does exist that there may be far more grave situations for some of them,” Cogle said.

In addition to the human cost, at least 500 homes and other structures have succumbed to flames, authoritie­s said. High winds are driving embers beyond the fire lines and igniting roofs and trees.

Near midday Saturday, firefighte­rs patrolled Placer Road for small fires. The flames had already reached Vietnam Veterans Memorial Bridge, which spans Clear Creek in rural Igo. The fire left the bridge “compromise­d,” the California Highway Patrol said.

Evacuees filled the region’s hotels as well as several facilities set up by the Red Cross.

An evacuation center at Shasta College in Redding reached capacity before 9 a.m. The 500 people bunking down in the campus’ cafeteria and gymnasium included residents of three senior care facilities, many of whom

are not mobile, said Peter Griggs, the college’s director of marketing and outreach. The campus is east of the 5 Freeway and “at a very safe distance,” he said.

On Saturday afternoon at Alta Mesa Elementary School, dozens of evacuees sat on folded chairs and bleachers in the school’s gym, listening to updates from fire officials during a town hall meeting.

Unified Incident Cmdr. Chief Brett Gouvea told them the fire had grown on multiple fronts. He said in five days the Carr fire had burned through the footprint of at least five major wildfires in the last 50 years in Shasta County history.

“I’ve never seen anything like that happen,” Gouvea said.

Ricky Young, incident commander for the National Park Service, said several wildfires burning across the state made it difficult to throw additional resources at the Carr fire.

As a result, the state has requested assistance from other agencies outside of California. He said about 150 engines were en route to help battle the huge blaze.

Attending the town hall meeting was Lance Starin, 60, who recently purchased property in Redding. He said his home was not in danger and that he came to the meeting to offer it as a shelter for families who may be looking for a place to stay.

Starin said he was impressed with the number of top-level fire officials who attended the meeting.

“I think it was brilliant to bring the commanders,” he said. “It shows they are united.”

Signs of the fire were unavoidabl­e throughout the region. Ash rained onto the heads of fire officials during another midday presentati­on to evacuees.

Before taking questions, Sacramento firefighte­r Chris Harvey warned them that no one could answer the question on everyone’s mind: When can we go home?

“This fire is a disaster,” Harvey said. “This fire still has very explosive behavior.… It’s likely to continue that way.”

There was sporadic looting of evacuated homes, Redding Police Chief Roger Moore said. Patrols had stopped several suspects, he said, but made no arrests.

“We have an idea who they are,” said Moore, who lost his home earlier in the week.

One man crossing the evacuation lines was Jerry Kirk, a ferrier in Anderson. When the fire kicked up Thursday, Kirk wrote a Facebook post offering help evacuating livestock.

“I’ve had two or three hours of sleep since then,” Kirk said at noon Saturday.

With his Dodge pickup and a trailer, Kirk said he had rescued about 200 animals from rural ranches and farms, including 50 horses and numerous goats and sheep. Many times when he pulled onto a property, the flames were nearby and the residents and the animals panicked, he said.

“They aren’t going to leave their animals, and they are just waiting on me,” he said.

When he arrived in Igo to pick up animals at 5 a.m. Saturday, the fire seemed 10 miles in the distance, he recalled.

“Nobody was concerned or really moving that quickly,” he said. By his third trip, at 9 a.m., “there was fire right there in town.”

While this year’s fire season has already devastated California, it seems unlikely to relent, said climatolog­ist Bill Patzert.

Several cities set all-time heat records this year — in July — but the most serious heat waves, Patzert said, typically don’t arrive until September.

“The dog days are not here yet,” he said. “We’re in for a long, hot summer.”

Or rather, many long, hot summers.

“The large picture, of course, is that we’re living in a warmer world. Temperatur­es are much higher this summer — next summer — than they were 50 or 100 years ago,” Patzert said.

And that heat sets a dangerous groundwork, said UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain. Vegetation across much of the Golden State has already dehydrated to “explosivel­y dry” levels not typically reached until September.

“It’s a lot easier to get bad fires under these conditions,” he said, “because you don’t need as much of a push from the winds.”

ruben.vives@latimes.com harriet.ryan@latimes.com Vives reported from Redding and Ryan from Los Angeles. Times staff writers Andrea Castillo, Marisa Gerber and Alejandra Reyes-Velarde contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Hector Amezcua Sacramento Bee ?? A FIREFIGHTE­R sprays a backburn on Cloverdale Road near Igo on Saturday as scorching heat, winds and dry conditions persisted.
Hector Amezcua Sacramento Bee A FIREFIGHTE­R sprays a backburn on Cloverdale Road near Igo on Saturday as scorching heat, winds and dry conditions persisted.
 ?? Paul Duginski Los Angeles Times ?? Sources: Wildfire Today/USFS, Nextzen, OpenStreet­Map
Paul Duginski Los Angeles Times Sources: Wildfire Today/USFS, Nextzen, OpenStreet­Map
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? A DEER smothered in fire retardant stands in the road as the Carr blaze threatened structures on Saturday near Redding. At least 500 homes and other structures have succumbed to f lames, authoritie­s said.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times A DEER smothered in fire retardant stands in the road as the Carr blaze threatened structures on Saturday near Redding. At least 500 homes and other structures have succumbed to f lames, authoritie­s said.
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? THE WILDFIRE swept through and destroyed property and structures on Saturday in Shasta. “We are doing everything in our power to bring an end to this chaos,” Shasta County Fire Chief Mike Hebrard said.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times THE WILDFIRE swept through and destroyed property and structures on Saturday in Shasta. “We are doing everything in our power to bring an end to this chaos,” Shasta County Fire Chief Mike Hebrard said.
 ??  ?? HOMES LEVELED by the Carr fire line the Lake Keswick Estates area on Friday in Redding. With triple-digit temperatur­es and bone-dry vegetation proving to be unyielding, authoritie­s said there was no end in sight to the blaze and expressed particular alarm about its rapid expansion.
HOMES LEVELED by the Carr fire line the Lake Keswick Estates area on Friday in Redding. With triple-digit temperatur­es and bone-dry vegetation proving to be unyielding, authoritie­s said there was no end in sight to the blaze and expressed particular alarm about its rapid expansion.
 ?? Noah Berger Associated Press ??
Noah Berger Associated Press
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS work to extinguish a blaze in an area outside Redding. A vehicle mechanical failure on Route 299 is said to have started the fire on Monday.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS work to extinguish a blaze in an area outside Redding. A vehicle mechanical failure on Route 299 is said to have started the fire on Monday.
 ?? Amanda Woodley ?? JAMES ROBERTS, 4, was killed when his Redding home burned Thursday night, relatives said. Greatgrand­mother Melody Bledsoe, 70, also perished.
Amanda Woodley JAMES ROBERTS, 4, was killed when his Redding home burned Thursday night, relatives said. Greatgrand­mother Melody Bledsoe, 70, also perished.
 ?? Amanda Woodley ?? EMILY ROBERTS ,5, died in the house fire. “My heart is crushed,” Amanda Woodley said. “I just keep seeing all of their beautiful faces.”
Amanda Woodley EMILY ROBERTS ,5, died in the house fire. “My heart is crushed,” Amanda Woodley said. “I just keep seeing all of their beautiful faces.”

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