Porterville Recorder

Wildfire destroys mobile homes in retirement park

- By ELIOT SPAGAT and AMANDA LEE MYERS

SAN DIEGO — A brush fire driven by gusty winds that have plagued Southern California all week exploded rapidly Thursday north of San Diego, destroying dozens of trailer homes in a retirement community and killing race horses at an elite training facility.

The fire expanded to 4 square miles in a matter of hours and tore through the tightly packed Rancho Monserate Country Club community in the small city of Fallbrook, known for its avocado orchards and horse ranches. At least two people were hospitaliz­ed with burns.

The destructiv­e blaze broke out as firefighte­rs tried to corral the largest fire in the state that was burning around Ventura — 130 miles to the north — and destroyed 430 buildings as it grew to 180 square miles. Fire crews were also fighting large fires around Los Angeles, but they made enough progress to lift most evacuation orders.

Like other fires that have broken out this week, Fallbrook has a history of destructiv­e blazes. Ten years ago, as a series of fires raced across Southern California, a blaze in Fallbrook injured five people, destroyed 206 homes and burned 14 square miles.

Thursday’s fire prompted the closure of state Highway 76 in both directions and evacuation­s in an area near the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base. Evacuation centers were set up in schools and casinos.

Jim Peratt was in Las Vegas on business when his wife called and said she was rounding up their two horses and evacuating their property in Bonsall, a community of 4,000 amid the rolling hills of rural San Diego County.

“She saw nothing but smoke and flames all around,” Peratt said. “I’m praying I’ll have a home when I get back. I’m just waiting to hear.”

As the flames approached the elite San Luis Rey Downs training facility for thoroughbr­eds, many of the more than 450 horses were cut loose to prevent them from being trapped in their stalls if barns caught fire, said Mac Mcbride of the Del Mar Thoroughbr­ed Club.

Horse trainer Scott Hansen said he knows that some of his 30 horses at the facility died.

“I don’t know how many are living and how many are dead,” he said. “I guess I’ll have to figure that out in the morning.”

Most of the horses were saved, Mcbride said, and were being loaded to go to the Del Mar Fairground­s.

Some ranchers posted urgent pleas on Twitter for help moving horses, including Rawhide Ranch, well-known for running horse riding camps for children and teens.

The fire and a smaller one 12 miles north in the city of Murrieta broke out the day after state officials sent an unpreceden­ted alert to cell phones across seven Southern California counties warning that strong Santa Ana winds could cause extreme fire danger. Although hurricane-force winds predicted did not materializ­e, firefighte­rs faced gusts that fanned flames and put thousands of homes in jeopardy.

Along the coast between Ventura and Santa Barbara, tiny beach communitie­s were under siege as fire leapt from steep hillsides across U.S. Highway 101.

“We drove through a wall of flames,” Wendy Frank said, describing her ordeal after evacuating her horses from Ojai on Wednesday night. “I didn’t know if we’d make it. I just put the accelerato­r down. I know we were going over 100 mph, we could have been going much more, and just hoped for the best.”

Fires flared up Thursday along the highway, forcing an evacuation of the dozens of homes at Faria Beach.

“Anyone in your homes still, you need to leave now,” a California Highway Patrol officer said through a loudspeake­r while driving down a smoke-shrouded street. “The fire is here, you need to leave.”

Joseph Ruffner had left earlier in the week but returned and said he was staying put this time.

“This morning there was a wall of fire back right over here,” he said. “I didn’t think it was no big deal, but it’s coming back to burn what it didn’t burn yesterday.”

The highway, which runs the length of the state and is a major commuter corridor to Los Angeles, was closed intermitte­ntly along the 28-mile stretch between Ventura and Santa Barbara.

The Ventura and Laarea fires have put tens of thousands of people under evacuation orders and destroyed nearly 200 homes and buildings, a figure almost certain to rise.

A woman was found dead in a wrecked car in an evacuation zone near the city of Santa Paula, where the Ventura County blaze began Monday night, but officials could not immediatel­y say whether the accident was fire-related.

The massive fire threatened Ojai, a scenic mountain town dubbed “Shangri-la” and known for its boutique hotels and New Age spiritual retreats.

Most of Ojai’s 7,000 residents were warned to clear out late Wednesday and patients unable to walk were moved from the Ojai Valley Community Hospital because of unpreceden­ted, hurricane-force Santa Ana winds in the overnight forecast.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JAE C. HONG ?? A wildfire threatens homes as it burns along a hillside in La Conchita Thursday. The wind-swept blazes have forced tens of thousands of evacuation­s and destroyed dozens of homes.
AP PHOTO BY JAE C. HONG A wildfire threatens homes as it burns along a hillside in La Conchita Thursday. The wind-swept blazes have forced tens of thousands of evacuation­s and destroyed dozens of homes.

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