The News (New Glasgow)

Wine country wildfires torch California homes

- BY ELLEN KNICKMEYER

Wildfires whipped by powerful winds swept through Northern California early Monday, sending residents on a headlong flight to safety through smoke and flames as homes and businesses burned in wine country. Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency in Napa, Sonoma and Yuba counties as officials estimated the fire had wiped out “well in excess of” 50 structures.

Brown said in his statement that the multiple fires “threatened thousands of homes.”

Mandatory evacuation­s were ordered in the wine country north of San Francisco Bay and elsewhere after blazes broke out late Sunday, sending many into a middle-of-the-night scramble to get out. There were long lines at gas stations as many received the call to evacuate.

“It was an inferno like you’ve never seen before,” said Marian Williams, who caravanned with neighbours through flames before dawn as one of the wildfires reached the vineyards and ridges at her small Sonoma County town of Kenwood.

Williams could feel the heat of her fire through the car as she fled.

“Trees were on fire like torches,” she said.

With so many fires, residents of Sonoma County struggled to figure out what roads to take, finding downed trees or flames blocking some routes.

Fires also burned just to the east in the Napa County wine country as well as in Yuba, Butte and Nevada counties - all north of the state capital. Cal Fire tweeted that as many as 8,000 homes were threatened in Nevada County, which lies on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada.

Napa County Fire Chief Barry Biermann said more than 50 structures had been destroyed, but there were no reports of injuries or deaths. Biermann said the fires had burned more than 68 square miles (176 sq. kilometres) as of the morning. He said crews had no containmen­t on the quickmovin­g fire.

“Right now with these conditions we can’t get ahead of this fire and do anything about the forward progress,” Biermann said.

Smoke was thick in San Francisco, 60 miles (96 kilometres) south of the Sonoma County fire.

Sonoma County resident John Dean was driving home early Monday when “I looked over and saw a house on fire” along the road. Soon he saw more houses engulfed in flames.

“I mean blazing, falling down on fire,” he said.

Dean sped to his Kenwood home, alerted neighbours, and fled to the town of Sonoma. He was one of hundreds of evacuees who streamed into a 24-hour Safeway market overnight, while authoritie­s set up an official evacuation centre.

Maureen McGowan was housesitti­ng for a brother near Kenwood, and said both of the homes on his property were on fire when she left. At the Safeway, she pointed to her feet, still in slippers. She had fled so fast that she hadn’t put on her shoes.

Belia Ramos, chairwoman of the Napa County Board of Supervisor­s, said officials did not yet have a count on how many properties were affected, either by the fire directly or by evacuation­s.

“We’re focusing on making evacuation­s and trying to keep people safe. We are not prepared to start counting. Certainly with day just breaking now, we are starting to see the structures that are affected,” she said shortly after sunrise.

“The gusts are very, very they’re tremendous and it’s what makes this fire unpredicta­ble. It’s something that we’re having to be very cautious about,” she said.

Ann Dubay, a spokeswoma­n for Sonoma County Emergency Operations Center, said the area where the largest fire started was relatively rural “but it went through many, many neighbourh­oods and we’re sure that structures have burned, we don’t know how many we don’t have a count yet.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Flames from a wildfire consume a a three car garage at a home Monday, east of Napa, Calif.
AP PHOTO Flames from a wildfire consume a a three car garage at a home Monday, east of Napa, Calif.

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