San Francisco Chronicle

Fire threat lingers in Yolo-Napa area

- By Erin Stone Erin Stone is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: erin.stone@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @erstone7

The County Fire, which erupted Saturday afternoon in Yolo County, has nearly tripled in size over the past several days, so far scorching 86,000 acres in Yolo and Napa counties, or about 134 square miles, fire officials said. The blaze was 27 percent contained by Wednesday evening, but still threatened about 1,500 structures, including hundreds of homes.

Most at risk was Guinda, a small town along Highway 16 north of Lake Berryessa in Yolo County, where the blaze initially broke out. No structures have been destroyed.

Mandatory evacuation orders remained in place Wednesday for residences between Monticello Dam and Pleasants Valley Road that are served by Highway 128, along with those west of Highway 16 to Berryessa Knoxville Road, south of Old County Road 40 and north of County Road 53, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

“We have been very successful with a lot of our firefights on the west part of the fire in Napa County right by the lake (Berryessa), and we’ve done some really good work on the southern part, but we are continuing to try to get a handle on the northern part,” said Cal Fire spokesman Israel Pinzon.

The biggest challenge to controllin­g the northern part of the fire has been difficult terrain, Pinzon said. That, combined with a dry winter and vegetation still recovering from the effects of a five-year drought, has contribute­d to what is becoming a volatile wildfire season.

Firefighte­rs worked through the night and early morning hours to build a line around the fire. The County Fire, the largest of several wildfires burning in Northern California, had rapidly grown because of powerful northeast winds that pushed it across the Napa County line Sunday.

Favorable wind conditions, lower temperatur­es and high humidity Wednesday helped firefighte­rs take large steps in containing the fire, said Daniel Sanchez, a Cal Fire spokesman.

“The fight’s going good,” Sanchez said. “The guys are working hard day and night.”

The Pawnee Fire in Lake County, meanwhile, burned 15,000 acres and was 90 percent contained by Wednesday morning, according to Cal Fire. Fifty structures remain threatened, and 22 have burned, including 12 homes. All evacuation orders have been lifted, but the remote Double Eagle Ranch neighborho­od remains threatened, said Tricia Austin, a Cal Fire spokeswoma­n.

Both the Pawnee Fire and the County Fire are expected to be fully contained by Tuesday.

More than 4,600 firefighte­rs continued to fight the two blazes on the July Fourth holiday.

By Wednesday afternoon, another fire had been added to their workload. This one, a vegetation fire in Stonyford (Colusa County), had consumed 75 acres and was 25 percent contained.

“Forward progress (of the fire) has been stopped,” fire officials reported. “Crews will continue to build control lines and will be doing heavy mopup throughout the day.”

 ?? Randall Benton / Sacramento Bee ?? Hot Shot crews from Mendocino use backfires to help contain the County Fire along Highway 128 near Lake Berryessa Tuesday. The fire has burned more than 86,000 acres.
Randall Benton / Sacramento Bee Hot Shot crews from Mendocino use backfires to help contain the County Fire along Highway 128 near Lake Berryessa Tuesday. The fire has burned more than 86,000 acres.

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