Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Firefighte­rs mount attack against 4,700-acre Idyllwild Fire

‘We’re throwing everything we have at it’

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – Joe Achtner was unloading tools from his truck about noon Wednesday when he noticed the sky above his Idyllwild home getting dark and flakes of ash falling around him.

Concerned, he drove down the street, where he saw a massive wildfire cresting a nearby hillside, threatenin­g homes in his neighborho­od of 30 years. By 9 p.m., the Cranston Fire had charred 4,700 acres in the mountains south of Idyllwild.

“It came up on us really, really quickly. Within a half hour, the whole town was overwhelme­d with flames,” said Achtner, a 65-year-old carpenter. “All of a sudden, it was right there – and it was huge.”

By the time he and his family loaded up their trucks with their three dogs and suitcases full of clothes, Riverside County sheriff’s deputies had swarmed the area. They ordered hundreds of homes evacuated in the mountain communitie­s of Idyllwild, Apple Canyon, Lake Hemet, Mountain Center and Hurkey Creek while firefighte­rs mounted an aggressive attack against flames.

“We’re throwing everything we can at it,” said Lee Beyer, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service. More than 700 firefighte­rs were battling the blaze, with several helicopter­s dumping flame retardant and water.

The Cranston Fire broke out during a blistering heat wave and spread rapidly, sending a massive tower of smoke over the San Jacinto Mountains. The blaze, which was at 0 percent containmen­t at about 9 p.m., destroyed five residentia­l structures and threatened hundreds of others.

Authoritie­s said an arsonist set multiple fires Wednesday in southwest Riverside County, including the Cranston Fire. Brandon N. Mcglover, 32, of Temecula was arrested on suspicion of five counts of arson to wild land, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The fires burned in southwest Riverside County and on federal land along State Highway 74 in the San Bernardino National Forest.

“I just pray for the town. We live in a beautiful town,” Achtner said. “The whole town is the trees and the town is the people and it’s all jeopardize­d right now.”

Much farther to the north, the deadly Ferguson Fire continued to rage The Cranston Fire burns off Highway 74 near Idyllwild, forcing evacuation­s on Wednesday.

about two miles away from Yosemite National Park, growing to 38,000 acres as firefighte­rs achieved 25 percent containmen­t.

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

A stream of cars, campers and trailers flowed out of the park Wednesday morning as the blaze inched closer. Heavy smoke has blanketed the valley and created air quality conditions worse than in Beijing, China’s heavily

polluted capital, said Yosemite spokesman Scott Gediman.

“With this hot, dry weather pattern, you just got the smoke sitting here,” he said. “The air quality fluctuates throughout the day but it’s really poor midday.”

Officials have handed 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, he said his voice has become raspy and he feels a dryness in his throat.

The scorching weather comes courtesy of a “heat dome” that settled over the

desert Southwest this week and has shifted gradually toward Southern California. Though the coasts have been relatively cooler than inland areas, humid conditions have helped equalize the misery.

Relief may be coming by the weekend, but this heat wave is an early sign of what’s to come: earlier, more frequent and more intense hot spells.

Typically heat waves reach their peak in September, said Bill Patzert, a climatolog­ist who formerly worked for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. But one this early and persistent is indicative of a warmer, more dangerous future for Los Angeles and the country, he said.

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