Weather helps in battle against 2 fires in north
Crews, aided by light winds and mild temps, increase Caldor and Dixie containment.
Firefighters continued to make headway Sunday against two massive Northern California wildfires, officials said, as winds remained light and temperatures hovered only slightly above normal.
“We are making good progress,” said Marco Rodriguez, public information officer with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. “We still have a few things to take care of, but overall, the fire hasn’t grown and we are getting hold of it. Things are looking good.”
The Caldor fire was 65% contained Sunday, up from 60% on Saturday. The fire has consumed 219,267 acres and destroyed 1,003 structures.
On Sunday, increasing numbers of residents were being allowed back into evacuation zones to assess damage to their homes, Rodriguez said. More than 10,000 people have been displaced by wildfires in the region, officials said.
About 100 miles to the northwest of the Caldor fire, the Dixie fire north of Sacramento was 67% contained by Sunday night, up from 62% a day earlier.
The fire has scorched 960,335 acres and destroyed 1,329 structures since it started July 13 near a Pacific Gas & Electric Co. power station in Feather River Canyon. The utility has said it might have been sparked by a tree falling into a power line.
The National Weather Service predicts calm conditions and temperatures slightly above normal for the next few days for both fire zones, with the possibility of a stronger system moving in by the weekend.
Light winds from the north and east are expected to lower humidity levels, but otherwise “they don’t look like much of a concern,” said Cory Mueller, a meteorologist with the weather service in Sacramento. No rain or lightning, which had sparked at least eight new starts in the area of the Caldor fire, are in the forecast.
“It’ll be a pretty quiet week, fire weather-wise, which will be pretty welcome,” Mueller said.
Meanwhile, a new brush fire burned some structures Sunday afternoon near Lake Mendocino and prompted evacuations.