Los Angeles Times

Thousands flee the Mosquito fire

- By Jessica Garrison

SACRAMENTO — Cristina McMillan knew she didn’t have much time — the flames were encroachin­g, the smoke was choking, and the Mosquito fire had already torn through thousands of acres near her home in the Sierra foothills, east of Sacramento.

Neverthele­ss, as they fled Georgetown Thursday with as much as they could gather, McMillan and her husband took the winding road out slowly. They had no choice. They had demanding passengers.

Ten cats.

“So much meowing,” McMillan recalled. “They don’t like the turns. … If I took a turn too fast, the cats [were] just screaming in the back.”

It was unclear how many people had fled the Mos

quito fire by Friday, but at least 8,000 in Placer and El Dorado counties were under evacuation orders, with hundreds of thousands watching nervously to see if the blaze would roar their way.

Eventually, the McMillans, who bought their house during the COVID-19 pandemic, made it to an Airbnb in Placervill­e. The cats skulked in their kennel — one “big ball of fur and sad eyes,” McMillan said. She and her husband, meanwhile, tried to figure out what would come next.

“We didn’t really know what we were getting into when we moved to Georgetown, to be honest,” she said of the ever-present fire danger and of meeting people in the community who have seen their homes incinerate­d. “It’s something that is supposed to happen to other people, but that is not how the world actually works.”

The Mosquito fire, which began Tuesday evening near Foresthill, quickly exploded to nearly 30,000 acres Friday — with zero containmen­t as of that evening — making it among the largest of the year in the state. It was blazing with little restraint, fueled by record hot temperatur­es, dry timber and wind.

On Thursday, it jumped a fork of the American River and produced a pyrocumulu­s cloud over the Sierra that could be seen from as far away as the Bay Area and orbiting satellites.

It could be mid-October before the blaze is contained, said Chris Vestal, the public informatio­n officer on the fire.

“It’s very hot. It’s dry, and it’s burning into areas where there are people,” Vestal said. “The No. 1 priority is to get people out of their homes and out of the area.”

“One of the challenges is the terrain,” he added. Because of the steep and rugged land, firefighte­rs can’t use bulldozers to build containmen­t lines; in temperatur­es close to 100 degrees, they have to use shovels to create them by hand.

Saturday is expected to be cooler; until then, Vestal said, the “greatest danger is really dependent on which way the wind blows.”

The communitie­s under the most imminent threat were Foresthill and Todd Valley, he said, but “the greatest potential for spread is south, toward the community of Cool.”

No injuries to firefighte­rs or residents have been reported, officials said, but air quality in much of the area was hazardous, and residents downwind — including in Nevada — were complainin­g.

An unknown number of homes had burned. Officials said they hadn’t been able to fully assess the damage, although there were reports of numerous structures destroyed in Volcanovil­le, an old mining town with a population of about 250.

The cause of the blaze is under investigat­ion, but Pacific Gas & Electric Co. on Thursday filed a report with the state disclosing “electrical activity” on one of its transmissi­on lines near where the fire started.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, who declared a state of emergency for El Dorado and Placer counties, announced that the state had obtained a grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to bring more resources to fight the blaze.

Evacuation centers were set up in Auburn and other towns, but many f leeing residents declined to go to them because they were traveling with pets.

Deanna Gray said she and her family slept Thursday night in a parking lot after evacuating, in part because she wanted to stay with a goat named Billy Bob.

Gray said her home in Volcanovil­le burned down last year after a fire sparked in a wood shop, and they were in the process of rebuilding it when the Mosquito fire ignited.

She and her husband and two children had been temporaril­y bunking with friends in Volcanovil­le. They decamped to her sister’s house in Georgetown but were there only one night before that community was evacuated.

After that, the extended family was camped out together. Her sister had an RV, and Gray and her husband, who were sleeping in their car, were looking to purchase one as well, on the theory that they would be living in it for a while.

“I’ve always wanted to live in an RV after I retired from the military, so I guess God was looking out,” Gray said with a mixture of hope and sadness, before adding that her 4-year-old daughter was having “a traumatic experience.”

Another fleeing resident, Liz Bakken of Georgetown, said she and her husband had tried to make the evacuation fun for their children, ages 2 and 4, even making a stop in Vacaville so the kids could enjoy a train excursion.

“But it’s kind of rough,” she said, noting that the children can tell their mother is upset.

When she got the warning to evacuate, Bakken said, she didn’t immediatel­y take it seriously — living near fire zones, she has grown used to such alarms.

But a short time later, she got an evacuation order, and a sheriff’s deputy told the family to get out.

It was then that Bakken had to make a decision about what to do with her two dogs, 10 cats, 14 chickens, 15 ducks, 15 guinea fowl, three peacocks and goats.

It quickly became apparent that they couldn’t all make the trip.

So she packed up her children and dogs and went about trying to capture the cats to put then in kennels.

Then she left ample water and open routes of escape for the other animals and drove down the mountain.

“We decided to bring the husband,” her husband, Sam, joked.

Beneath the humor, Bakken said she was consumed with fear and grief about what will happen to the animals, which she hopes will find a way to escape — not to mention her worries about her beloved home on 10 acres, her neighbors and the wild, rugged canyons that surround them.

“We’re thinking everything is probably already in flames,” she said.

 ?? Noah Berger Associated Press ?? A DOG and its owner evacuate Foresthill in Placer County on Friday, as the Mosquito fire burns through the Sierra foothills east of Sacramento.
Noah Berger Associated Press A DOG and its owner evacuate Foresthill in Placer County on Friday, as the Mosquito fire burns through the Sierra foothills east of Sacramento.
 ?? Noah Berger Associated Press ?? A HAND CREW heads out along Mosquito Ridge Road to battle the Mosquito fire near Foresthill in Placer County — at 30,000 acres, among the largest of the year in the state. At least 8,000 people were under evacuation orders; many had concerns about their animals.
Noah Berger Associated Press A HAND CREW heads out along Mosquito Ridge Road to battle the Mosquito fire near Foresthill in Placer County — at 30,000 acres, among the largest of the year in the state. At least 8,000 people were under evacuation orders; many had concerns about their animals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States