The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Neighbors with hoses target fires as crews urge them to stop

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With California firefighte­rs strapped for resources, residents have organized to put out flames themselves in a large swath of land burning south of San Francisco, defending their homes despite orders to evacuate and pleas by officials to get out of danger.

They are going in despite California’s firefighti­ng agency repeatedly warning people that it’s not safe and actually illegal to go into evacuated areas, and they can hinder official efforts to stop the flames. The former head of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said the effort near a cluster of wildfires around the city of Santa Cruz is larger and more organized than he recalls in previous blazes.

“People are frustrated with the lack of resources available. People are always going to try to sneak back in, but it sounds like this is growing to a new level,” said Ken Pimlott, who retired as director of the Cal Fire in 2018. “I haven’t seen people re-engage to this scale, particular­ly with the level of organizati­on.”

The group of wildfires near Santa Cruz has burned 125 square miles and destroyed more than 500 buildings. While those fires are 20 percent contained, firefighte­rs have been pushed to the breaking point since lightning ignited more than 500 blazes in one night last week, most of them in the central and northern parts of the state.

In Boulder Creek, a community at the base of the Santa Cruz Mountains near a state park filled with towering redwoods, some people call the group of residents fighting the flames the ”Boulder Creek Boys.“They say the group, which includes former volunteer firefighte­rs, have been protecting homes and extinguish­ing blazes behind fire lines for over a week, at times using nothing but dirt and garden hoses.

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