Texarkana Gazette

Wildfire evacuees return home to find devastatio­n

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SANTA ROSA, Calif. — Nikki and Kevin Conant returned to their home in Northern California wine country Wednesday to find only the charred remains of their home and burned pieces of the wine barrels they used to repurpose into custom-made art and furniture.

“It was like a part of me is gone, burned up in the fire. Everything we built here, everything we made here is gone,” Nikki Conant said.

The couple, both 52, were preparing to evacuate Sunday when they saw an orange glow in the hills near their Santa Rosa rental home. Within 45 minutes, they could hear the trees crackling and propane tanks exploding as the blaze reached their community. They jumped in their car, and for what seemed like an eternity they were stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic.

“I thought we were going to burn alive. I really did. It was horrible,” Nikki Conant said.

Nikki sobbed Wednesday when she spotted her now-burned chicken coop. Her twelve beloved chickens all died in the fire. All the tools for their repurposin­g business were gone, too.

The Conants are among more than 70,000 people still under evacuation orders in the wine region north of San Francisco where the Glass Fire has incinerate­d at least 80 homes along with winery installati­ons and other buildings.

Flames were continuing to tear through the region’s rolling pastures and tree-dotted hills, toppling renowned wineries and restaurant­s.

“Every time we try to construct some control lines, the fire is outflankin­g us, so we have to pull back,” Cal Fire Chief Mark Brunton said.

Firefighte­rs were also warily watching for “violent” winds expected to return to the NapaSonoma area late Wednesday, with continuing extreme heat and low humidity. Red flag warnings of extreme fire danger were to continue into Friday evening.

Officials said they were requesting more fire crews to join 2,000 firefighte­rs battling the blaze that has charred 76 square miles (197 square kilometers) with almost no containmen­t.

Pacific Gas & Electric also cut power to another 3,100 customers in Napa County at the request of firefighte­rs, the Santa Rosa Press Democrat reported.

Hot weather and the potential for fire damage could stress power supplies as people switch on their air conditione­rs. To avoid shortages, the California Independen­t System Operator, which runs the state’s power grid, issued a statewide Flex Alert for 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday. It urged customers to avoid using large appliances during that time and to keep the thermostat at 78 degrees or above.

A mid-August heat wave strained the grid to the point where Cal ISO ordered utilities to implement brief rolling blackouts for the first time since 2001.

Numerous studies in recent years have linked bigger wildfires in America to global warming from the burning of coal, oil and gas, especially because climate change has made California much drier. A drier California means plants are more flammable.

 ?? AP Photo/Haven Daley ?? ■ Kevin Conant and his wife, Nikki, sift through debris of their burnt home and business Conants Wine Barrel Creations after the Glass/Shady fire engulfed it Wednesday in Santa Rosa, Calif. The Conants escaped with their lives, which we are grateful for, but they barely made it out with the clothes on their backs in the wake of the fire. The Glass and Zogg fires are among nearly 30 wildfires burning in California.
AP Photo/Haven Daley ■ Kevin Conant and his wife, Nikki, sift through debris of their burnt home and business Conants Wine Barrel Creations after the Glass/Shady fire engulfed it Wednesday in Santa Rosa, Calif. The Conants escaped with their lives, which we are grateful for, but they barely made it out with the clothes on their backs in the wake of the fire. The Glass and Zogg fires are among nearly 30 wildfires burning in California.

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