Marin Independent Journal

Fire that threatened Tahoe 100% contained

- By Fiona Kelliher

More than two months after it broke out and threatened the iconic Lake Tahoe region, the Caldor Fire was 100% contained as of Thursday, fire officials said.

The fire — which ultimately burned 221,835 acres across three counties — captured internatio­nal attention after it emerged on Aug. 14 in El Dorado County and raced toward the northeast, blowing past hopeful containmen­t lines, throwing flames into the Tahoe Basin and forcing the evacuation of thousands from the lake’s shoreline.

Three days after it started, the fire exploded into the town of Grizzly Flats, razing entire streets in the 1,200-person community and prompting Cal Fire to request hundreds more sought-after firefighte­rs — many of whom arrived, exhausted, from weeks on the front lines of the massive Dixie Fire.

Over the next week, high winds stirred the flames to the northeast and forced the indefinite closure of Highway 50. By Aug. 30, the 50,000-some people living in the South Lake area were ordered to evacuated, causing a massive traffic jam and a “nightmare scenario” for those who never expected to flee their homes.

Along the way, the fire managed to tear past key stops where fire officials hoped to contain it: First crossing Highway 50, then the ski resort Sierra-atTahoe, and finally the granite rockface of Echo Summit.

But throughout the first week of September, a shift toward gentler weather conditions allowed crews to start gaining sizable containmen­t of the fire, corralling both its western and eastern edges and evoking cautious optimism for the first time. Thousands of residents began heading back home.

As of Thursday, officials said, the fire was not completely put out, with some smoldering and isolated burning expected to continue into the winter months. But with more than 400 miles of containmen­t lines around its perimeter, the blaze was no longer expected to expand outward.

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