The Reporter (Vacaville)

Largest state wildfire threatens marijuana-growing area

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SAN FRANCISCO >> California’s largest wildfire is threatenin­g a marijuana growing enclave, and authoritie­s said many of the locals have refused to evacuate and abandon their maturing crops even as weather forecaster­s predict more hot, dry and windy conditions that could fan flames.

The wildfire called the August Complex is nearing the small communitie­s of Post Mountain and Trinity Pines, about 200 miles (322 kilometers) northwest of Sacramento, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Law enforcemen­t officers went door to door warning of the encroachin­g fire danger but could not force residents to evacuate, Trinity County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Nate Trujillo said.

“It’s mainly growers,” Trujillo said. “And a lot of them, they don’t want to leave because that is their livelihood.”

As many as 1,000 people remained in Post Mountain and Trinity Pines, authoritie­s and local residents estimated Thursday.

Numerous studies in recent years have linked bigger U.S. wildfires 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.

The threatened marijuana growing area is in the Emerald Triangle, a threecount­y corner of Northern California that by some estimates is the nation’s largest cannabis-producing region.

People familiar with Trinity Pines said the community has up to 40 legal farms, with more than 10 times that number in hidden, illegal growing areas.

Growers are wary of leaving the plants vulnerable

to flames or thieves. Each farm has crops worth half a million dollars or more and many are within days or weeks of harvest.

One estimate put the value of the area’s legal marijuana crop at about $20 million.

“There (are) millions of dollars, millions and millions of dollars of marijuana out there,” Trujillo said. “Some of those plants are 16 feet (5 meters) tall, and they are all in the budding stages of growth right now.”

Gunfire in the region is c ommon. A rec ent night brought what locals dubbed the “roll call” of cannabis cultivator­s shooting rounds from pistols and automatic weapons as warnings to outsiders, said Post Mountain volunteer Fire Chief As

trid Dobo, who also manages legal cannabis farms.

Mike McMillan, spokesman for the federal incident command team managing the northern section of the August Complex, said fire officials plan to deliver a clear message that “we are not going to die to save people. That is not our job.”

“We are going to knock door to door and tell them once again,” McMillan said. “However, if they choose to stay and if the fire situation becomes, as we say, very dynamic and very dangerous … we are not going to risk our lives.”

A firefighte­r was killed and another was injured on Aug. 31 while working on the fire. Diana Jones, a volunteer firefighte­r from Texas, was among 26 people who have died since more than two dozen major wildfires broke out across the state last month.

A memorial service was held Friday for a veteran firefighte­r, Charles Morton, 39, a squad boss with the Big Bear Interagenc­y Hotshot Crew who died Sept. 17 while battling the El Dorado Fire in the San Bernardino National Forest east of Los Angeles.

“I know that Charlie was a very skilled, in fact extraordin­ary, firefighte­r and a fire leader,” U. S. Forest Service Chief Vicki Christians­en told the gathering at The Rock Church in San Bernardino.

“He committed himself, often for weeks and months on end, to protecting lives, communitie­s and natural resources all around this country in service to fellow Americans.”

The Butte County Sheriff’s Office on Friday released the identity of another of the 15 people killed in a rampaging forest fire earlier this month. The remains of Linda Longenbach, 71, of Berry Creek, were found on Sept. 10 in a roadway about 10 feet from an ATV, close to the body of a man previously identified as Paul Winer, 68.

A relative told investigat­ors the victims were aware of the fire and chose not to evacuate.

Efforts to extinguish the wildfires have benefitted recently from low winds and normal temperatur­es along with and moist air flowing inland from the Pacific. But forecaster­s said that weather pattern will reverse during the weekend as a ridge of high pressure boosts temperatur­es and generates gusty winds flowing from the interior to the coast.

In northern and central areas of the state the strongest winds were forecast to occur from Saturday night into Sunday morning, followed by another burst Sunday night into Monday.

 ?? KENT PORTER — THE PRESS DEMOCRAT ?? A Cal Fire crew from Cobb Mountain assists in putting out a 12-acre brush fire in Larkfield on Thursday.
KENT PORTER — THE PRESS DEMOCRAT A Cal Fire crew from Cobb Mountain assists in putting out a 12-acre brush fire in Larkfield on Thursday.

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