The Columbus Dispatch

Officials optimistic in fight against Lake Tahoe fire

- Sam Metz and Janie Har

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. – The huge California wildfire near Lake Tahoe resort communitie­s has calmed down significantly and was growing at the smallest rate in two weeks, but firefighters must stay engaged and take advantage of good weather while it lasts, commanders said Friday.

The Caldor Fire remained only a few miles from the city of South Lake Tahoe, which was emptied of 22,000 residents days ago, along with casinos and shops across the state line in Nevada, but no significant fire activity occurred there on Thursday, officials said.

“I'll sum everything up on the incident with the words cautiously optimistic, and that's as the result of a lot of hard work that you've put in now in over two weeks of being here,” Tim Ernst, an operations section chief, told firefighters.

The nearly 333-square-mile fire was not making any significant advances and was not challengin­g containmen­t lines in long sections of its perimeter, but Ernst said “the risk is still out there” with some areas that remained hot.

The fire had been driven northeast on a course leading to South Lake Tahoe for days by southweste­rn winds, but that pattern ended this week and containmen­t of the blaze increased to 29%.

“Very positive trends with regards to weather,” said Dean Gould, a U.S. Forest Service administra­tor. “That's huge for us. Let's take full advantage of it while we have this window.”

Gould said the Caldor Fire's growth rate had declined for four straight days and that its growth from Thursday to Friday morning was just 3.6 square miles.

“The last time it grew that small of an amount was 14 days ago,” Gould said. “Things are clearly heading in the right direction for us.”

Amid the positive outlook, incident meteorolog­ist Jim Dudley warned that the air mass in the Sierra Nevada drains downslope every night and then sloshes upslope during the day and that the region's terrain of ridges and deep canyons can create winds that go in “squirrely directions.”

“Just because we don't have red-flag wind conditions across the fire, the wind threat is still there and it's all localized,” he said.

The fire – which began Aug. 14, was named after the road where it started and raged through densely forested, craggy areas – was still considered a threat to more than 30,000 homes, businesses and other buildings ranging from cabins to ski resorts.

But there was optimism and progress as winds eased on the fire's western flank.

On the fire's northeaste­rn side, firefighters with bulldozers and shovels steadily hacked out fire lines and burned away vegetation to box in the flames before they reached Lake Tahoe – despite gusty ridgetop winds.

“In the valleys we're doing plenty of work,” fire informatio­n officer Marco Rodriguez said. “The crews are working and they're doing controlled fires … to try to make those containmen­t lines a little bit stronger.”

Residents who were forced to flee South Lake Tahoe earlier this week remained evacuated along with people across the state line in Douglas County, Nevada.

 ?? HONG/AP JAE C. ?? Walter Villalobos of the Cosumnes Fire Department stands on top of a fire truck as the sun is visible through smoke generated by the Caldor Fire near South Lake Tahoe, Calif.
HONG/AP JAE C. Walter Villalobos of the Cosumnes Fire Department stands on top of a fire truck as the sun is visible through smoke generated by the Caldor Fire near South Lake Tahoe, Calif.

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