USA TODAY US Edition

Size of Yosemite wildfire doubles; communitie­s flee

Terrain, temperatur­e add to firefighte­rs’ burden

- John Bacon Contributi­ng: Mike Chapman, Trevor Hughes, Doyle Rice, USA TODAY NETWORK; The Associated Press

A deadly California wildfire more than doubled in size and raged through more than 14 square miles of brush and forest Monday, blanketing much of Yosemite National Park in smoke and forcing closure of a major access road at the height of tourist season.

Fire officials had not determined the cause of the blaze that began burning Friday night along the park’s western edge, where evacuation orders were issued for a handful of small communitie­s.

Hundreds of firefighte­rs battled a blaze that was only 2 percent contained. John DeYoe, spokesman for the interagenc­y campaign combating the Ferguson Fire, said a “massive order” of firefighte­rs, engines and other gear rolled in Monday.

“We had extreme fire behavior overnight,” he told USA TODAY. “It caught a couple of drainages (low-lying areas) and ran.”

More communitie­s were warned that mandatory evacuation­s were coming soon, “so get your stuff ready,” DeYoe said.

The Yosemite Cedar Lodge is normally buzzing this time of year. An evacua- tion order emptied it. “You can’t see anything, it’s so smoky outside. It’s crazy,” front desk clerk Spencer Arebalo said.

The terrain is so rugged that firefighte­rs struggled to retrieve the body of firefighte­r Braden Varney, 36, a married father of two, who was killed Saturday when his bulldozer rolled over, Cal Fire Deputy Chief Scott McLean said.

The fire is one of dozens burning across the West as the region struggles with high temperatur­es that increased fire danger. The steep, rugged terrain adds to the challenges facing the Ferguson Fire team.

“Weather is expected to remain hot and dry for the next seven days, with isolated thundersto­rms possible,” Michael Strawhun, South Central Sierra Interagenc­y Incident Management Team, warned in his incident report.

Throughout Washington, Oregon, Northern California and much of the interior Northwest, above-average temperatur­es will persist through at least the first half of the week, according to AccuWeathe­r. By the end of the week, cooler weather is expected to infiltrate the Pacific Northwest, limiting daily high temperatur­es to more comfortabl­e levels.

In Yosemite, a 2-mile section of State Route 140 was shut down as firefighte­rs worked to form a fire line along the highway. The park remained open, but visitors were flagged with warnings.

“Due to the road closure on Highway

140, expect long wait times on Highway 41 at the south entrance to Yosemite National Park,” the park said on Twitter, adding that “visitors who are sensitive to smoke should plan to limit any strenuous outdoor activities or plan to visit the park another time.”

UCLA climatolog­ist Daniel Swain warned that the fire is “likely to burn for many days and may eventually become a major threat” to the 1,200square-mile park in the Sierra Nevada.

The flames burn brush and timber in steep, inaccessib­le terrain. Pacific Gas and Electric de-energized its power lines that run through the fire area, so there’s no electricit­y in the Yosemite, El Portal and Foresta regions.

More than 1 million acres across the country are part of active wildfires, according to federal officials. More than

3.3 million acres have been burned, slightly ahead of the national average over the past decade for this time of year.

“You can’t see anything, it’s so smoky outside.”

Spencer Arebalo Yosemite Cedar Lodge

 ?? ANDREW KUHN/AP ?? A helicopter gathers water from the Merced River to fight the Ferguson Fire along steep terrain behind the Redbud Lodge along Highway 140 in Mariposa County, Calif., on Saturday.
ANDREW KUHN/AP A helicopter gathers water from the Merced River to fight the Ferguson Fire along steep terrain behind the Redbud Lodge along Highway 140 in Mariposa County, Calif., on Saturday.

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