Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Burned down in California

- MARCIO SANCHEZ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Noah Berger, Chris Weber, Robert Jablon, Michael Balsamo and John Antczak of The Associated Press.

A chimney is about all that remains Thursday at a home site in Idyllwild, Calif., after a wildfire that police suspect was one of five started by arson Wednesday grew to 7.5 square miles in a few hours. About 3,200 people were ordered to evacuate. Meanwhile, a fire stoked by hot and windy weather raged through a forest near Whiskeytow­n Lake in far northern California.

IDYLLWILD, Calif. — Fire stoked by hot and windy weather raged through a forest in far northern California on Thursday. In mountain communitie­s east of Los Angeles, calmer conditions aided firefighte­rs on the lines of a suspected arson wildfire that forced thousands of people to flee.

California Gov. Jerry Brown on Thursday issued emergency proclamati­ons in both Riverside County in the south and Shasta County in the north. The declaratio­ns authorize the state to rally resources to local government­s.

In the north, new evacuation­s were ordered for communitie­s in the wilderness recreation region near Whiskeytow­n Lake as that wildfire tripled in size to more than 31 square miles. It had already forced residents out of French Gulch, a hamlet dating to the Gold Rush.

French Gulch resident Raquel Hines said she had two hours to evacuate and that others in the former mining town had as little as 30 minutes to leave.

The community has faced two wildfires in the past two weeks, Hines said.

“It’s terrifying. You know you’re frightened a little bit because you don’t know if you’re going to come back to your house and the town is going to be different,” she told KRCR-TV.

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Unit Chief Mike Hebrard told the Record Searchligh­t newspaper that the blaze made a huge push overnight and that engine crews were in the community of Old Shasta trying to save structures.

Hundreds of miles to the south, winds were absent over the fire in Southern California’s San Jacinto Mountains. But temperatur­es were rapidly rising, and forecaster­s said highs could hit 100 degrees. They also warned of possible afternoon wind gusts that could create dangerous fire conditions.

Elsewhere in the state, a huge forest fire continued to grow outside Yosemite National Park. A total of 100 homes were still considered under threat in the San Francisco Bay community of Clayton, although firefighte­rs had stopped the progress of a small fire there after one house burned.

The blaze in the San Jacinto Mountains broke out Wednesday and quickly turned into a wall of flame that torched timber and tinder-dry brush. In a matter of hours, it grew to 7.5 square miles.

About 3,200 people in the town of Idyllwild and nearby communitie­s were ordered to evacuate. An estimated 600 homes were threatened.

The fire was the largest of at least five that police believe were purposely set Wednesday by a man whose car was reportedly spotted at the starting point of the blaze in Riverside County, officials said.

Brandon McGlover, 32, of Temecula was booked on five counts of arson, state fire officials said. It wasn’t clear whether he had an attorney.

Authoritie­s ordered residents to leave Idyllwild and several neighborin­g communitie­s, home to about 12,000 people.

William Blodgett of Idyllwild said he couldn’t get home because of the fire and had to wait along with others at a gas station in nearby Mountain Center — until the fire hopped a highway and began to move in his direction.

“We were all peeling out of there as fast as we could,” he told KNBC-TV. “It was apocalypti­c.”

Horses and other animals were taken to shelters, as were several hundred children who were evacuated from summer camps. About 200 were at a high school serving as a shelter, KCALTV reported.

The fire in the San Bernardino National Forest sent up a cloud 50,000 feet high that was so enormous it created its own weather in the form of lightning, the National Weather Service reported.

Throughout the day, helicopter­s and planes dumped water and fire retardant that turned land and homes pink. Fire engines also were stationed to protect homes.

Yosemite Valley was closed at noon Wednesday and will be closed until at least Sunday.

Officials emphasized that Yosemite wasn’t in imminent danger from the fire, which grew to more than 67 square miles in the adjacent Sierra National Forest. Authoritie­s decided on the shutdown to allow crews to perform protective measures such as burning away brush along roadways without having to deal with traffic in the park that welcomes 4 million visitors annually.

 ?? AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ??
AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ
 ?? AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ?? Firefighte­rs and members of the media watch smoke from a wildfire Thursday near Mountain Center, Calif.
AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ Firefighte­rs and members of the media watch smoke from a wildfire Thursday near Mountain Center, Calif.

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