Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

California reels from wildfires

Thousands flee 367 blazes across state, Gov. Newsom says

- By Haven Daley and Janie Har

Thousands flee as 367 blazes and nearly 11,000 lightning strikes plague the state, Gov. Newsom says.

VACAVILLE, Calif. — Crews were battling wildfires in the San Francisco Bay Area and thousands of people were under orders to evacuate Wednesday as hundreds of wildfires blazed across the state amid a blistering heat wave now in its second week.

Gov. Gavin Newsom blamed “this extraordin­ary weather we’re experienci­ng and all of these lightning strikes” for 367 known fires, including 23 major fires or groups of fires. He said the state has recorded nearly 11,000 lightning strikes in 72 hours.

The newest fires stretched from the wine country to the Santa Cruz Mountains, moving with ferocious speed amid an intense heat wave that also has brought rolling blackouts. Smoke from the fires has caused terrible air quality across the region.

Police and firefighte­rs went door-to-door before dawn Wednesday in a frantic scramble to warn residents to evacuate as fire encroached on Vacaville, a city of about 100,000 between San Francisco and Sacramento. At least 50 structures were destroyed, including some homes, and 50 damaged.

“This is an incredibly emotional and stressful time for most of us who’ve endured a number of wildfires over the last few years,” Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick said.

Ash and smoke filled the air over San Francisco, which is surrounded by wildfires burning in multiple counties to the north, east and south. The socalled LNU Lightning fire is made up of several fires burning in five counties north of San Francisco, including in Vacaville, and had consumed nearly 100 square miles as of Wednesday.

John Gardiner, 60, stayed up all night after receiving an alert from a neighbor of oncoming fire around just before midnight. His house and neighbors’ homes were still safe, but he worried that could change as crews anticipate hot winds Wednesday.

“It was incredible, things swirling, winds just whipping through like a howling ripping sound and then you could hear explosions going off,” he said. “You can taste smoke in your mouth.”

Victoria Gregorich, 54, said her family loaded up the car and left their Vacaville home after deputies rang the gate around 12:30 a.m. Wednesday to tell them to evacuate. The fire destroyed her greenhouse, but the house was spared. Her neighbors were not so lucky.

“It’s devastatin­g,” she said. “I just thank God we have our home.”

Elvis Castaneda, 28, and his father, Silverio, spent the night moving ranching equipment to a safer location, removing vegetation and making firebreaks with their tractor around the properties of friends.

“We couldn’t see the flames, but the sky was pretty orange, and we knew it was coming our way,” Elvis Castaneda said.

He said he drove home at 3 a.m. and started packing legal documents, photos, passports and his firearms after hearing that his girlfriend’s family, who live in a ranch two miles away, were told to evacuate and move all their farm animals to safety.

He got the order to leave after dawn Wednesday.

In San Mateo and Santa Cruz counties, about 22,000 were ordered to evacuate because of a fire burning in dense wooded parkland that threatened communitie­s, Cal Fire spokesman Jonathan Cox said.

“This is a very active timber fire burning in two counties with a serious threat to both public safety and for structures that are out in front of it,” he said.

Christophe­r Godley, Sonoma County’s emergency management director, said about 10,000 were under evacuation orders as crews battled two blazes and were working to set up an evacuation center with alternate locations for people exhibiting coronaviru­s symptoms.

He conceded that resources are strapped statewide.

“It’s difficult to second guess what the fire commanders are doing with their aircraft. But it’s not like last year when we saw just a huge wealth of resources flowing into the county,” he said. “It is what it is.”

In the East San Francisco Bay, a cluster of 20 separate lightning-sparked fires threatened 1,400 structures in rugged terrain with dense brush. Strong winds and low humidity made the firefight challengin­g.

Blazes engulfed rural and forest areas near the San Francisco Bay Area, near Salinas in Monterey County, around Oroville Dam north of Sacramento, forested areas west of Silicon Valley, in remote Mendocino County and near the Nevada state line north of Lake Tahoe.

Several also were burning in northern coastline areas and in Southern California.

The cluster of wine country fires threaten an area that only last year grappled with another massive blaze that forced 200,000 to flee — a task made more complicate­d this year because of the pandemic.

To the south, evacuation­s were ordered for Boulder Creek to the west of Silicon Valley, a community of 5,000 in the Santa Cruz mountains where forested roads, some paved, some dirt, can easily become blocked in storms or fires.

Los Angeles Times contribute­d.

 ?? MAX WHITTAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A structure smolders Wednesday in Vacaville, California. Thousands of residents were forced to flee their homes.
MAX WHITTAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES A structure smolders Wednesday in Vacaville, California. Thousands of residents were forced to flee their homes.

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