The Columbus Dispatch

California wildfires continue to threaten weary residents

- By Janie Har and Brian Skoloff

UPPER LAKE, Calif. — Jessyca Lytle fled a fast-moving Northern California wildfire in 2015 that spared her property but destroyed her mother's memorabili­a-filled home in rural and rugged Lake County.

Less than three years later, Lytle found herself listening to scanner traffic and fireproofi­ng her mother's new home on Tuesday as another wildfire advanced and turned the sun into a tiny orange dot suspended in the smoke.

"What I'm thinking right now is I just want this to end," Lytle said, adding that she was "exhausted in every way possible — physically, emotionall­y, all of that.

"But you can't stop doing what you have to do, and you can't stop facing what you have to face."

Firefighte­rs pressed their battle against a pair of fires that have burned 117 square miles across Mendocino and Lake counties. Roughly 19,000 people have been warned to flee and 10,000 homes remain under threat.

Derek Hawthorne, a firefighte­r and spokesman for the fire crews, said the hot weather was not ideal but the wind where he was in the city of Upper Lake was on their side.

"It's blowing into the fire, and it's kind of blowing it back on itself," he said.

Elsewhere, the Carr Fire had burned more than 880 homes and killed six people in and around Redding. Another 348 outbuildin­gs were also destroyed, and the blaze is now the seventh-most destructiv­e wildfire in California history.

In Riverside County, east of Los Angeles, an arson fire that destroyed seven homes last week was 82 percent contained Monday.

People in Lake County, an impoverish­ed community of 65,000 about 110 miles north of San Francisco, know about evacuation­s.

The 2015 Valley Fire, which came on the heels of two other fires, killed four and destroyed 1,300 homes when it blew up unexpected­ly during a September heatwave. It wiped out entire neighborho­ods prized for their privacy and sense of community.

Since then, parts of the county have been evacuated regularly because of fire, most recently in June.

Evacuation orders remained in effect Tuesday for the town of Lakeport, the county seat, along with some smaller communitie­s and a section of the Mendocino National Forest.

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