The Mercury News

Dixie Fire closes in on 2 towns as crews fight winds, lightning

- By Eugene Garcia and Daisy Nguyen

QUINCY » — Johnnie Brookwood had never heard of a road named Dixie when a wildfire began a month ago in the Sierra Nevada.

Within three weeks, it exploded into the largest wildfire burning in the U.S., destroying more than 1,000 homes and businesses including a lodge in the gold rush-era town of Greenville where she was renting a room for $650 per month.

“At first (the fire) didn’t affect us at all, it was off in some place called Dixie, I didn’t even know what it means,” Brookwood, 76, said Saturday. “Then it was ‘Oh no we have to go too?’ Surely Greenville won’t burn, but then it did and now all we can see are ashes.”

Firefighte­rs faced “another critical day” as thundersto­rms pushed flames closer to two towns not far from where the Dixie Fire destroyed much of Greenville last week.

The thundersto­rms, which began Friday, didn’t produce much rain but whipped up wind and created lightning strikes, forcing crews to focus on using bulldozers to build lines and keep the blaze from reaching Westwood, a town of about 1,700 people. Westwood was placed under evacuation orders Aug. 5.

Wind gusts of up to 50 mph also pushed the fire closer to Janesville, a town of about 1,500 people, east of Greenville, said Jake Cagle, the operations chief at the east zone of the fire.

“Very tough day in there yesterday in the afternoon and the night (crew) picked up the pieces and tried to secure the edge the best they could with the resources they had,” he said in a briefing Saturday.

With a similar forecast of thundersto­rms Saturday, firefighte­rs faced “another critical day, another challengin­g day,” Cagle said.

The fire was among more than 100 large wildfires burning in more than a dozen states in the West seared by drought and

hot, bone-dry weather that turned forests, brushlands, meadows and pastures into tinder.

The U.S. Forest Service said Friday it’s operating in crisis mode, fully deploying firefighte­rs and maxing out its support system.

The roughly 21,000 federal firefighte­rs working on the ground is more than double the number of firefighte­rs sent to contain forest fires at this time a year ago, said Anthony Scardina, a deputy forester for the agency’s Pacific Southwest region.

More than 6,000 firefighte­rs alone were battling the Dixie Fire, which has ravaged nearly 845 square miles — an area the size of Tokyo —

and was 31% contained.

“The size is unimaginab­le, its duration and its impact on these people, all of us, including me, is unbelieve,” Brookwood said while staying in her third evacuation center.

The cause of the fire has not been determined. Pacific Gas and Electric has said the fire may have been started when a tree fell on its power line.

There also was a danger of new fires erupting because of unstable weather conditions, including extreme heat across the northern half of the West and a chance of thundersto­rms that could bring lightning to Northern California, Oregon and Nevada, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

A fast-moving fire broke out Saturday afternoon east of Salt Lake City, shutting down Interstate 80 and prompting the evacuation of Summit Park, a mountain community of 6,600 people. Fire officials said the blaze was burning about 3 square miles and threatenin­g thousands of homes and power lines.

In southeaste­rn Montana, firefighte­rs were gaining ground on a pair of fires that chewed through vast rangelands and at one point threatened the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservatio­n.

The fires were caused by heat from coal seams, the deposits of coal found in the ground in the area, said Peggy Miller, a spokeswoma­n for the fires.

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