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Fire crews across California have been straining to cover hundreds of wildfires that have burned more than 1,000 square miles and destroyed nearly 100 homes since a lightning storm ignited most of them more than two weeks ago. Some 1,450 fires had been contained Wednesday, but more than 320 still were active, authorities said. On the state's Central Coast, firefighters pushed back a blaze threatening Big Sur
-- enough to allow hundreds of people to return to their homes Tuesday and Wednesday. At least 27 homes and 31 other structures have been destroyed in Big Sur. The fire has burned more than 140 square miles. Fire officials said the blaze is still searing the mountains east of the Big Sur community and had crept within a mile-and-a-half of a historic Zen monastery. Monks at the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center had spent weeks preparing to fight the blaze, but they decided to flee Wednesday night, according to the center's Web site. A fire burning in the Santa Ynez Mountains above the Santa Barbara County coast was more than half contained Wednesday. More than 1,100 firefighters, nine helicopters and five air tankers were attacking the blaze, which had blackened more than 15 square miles of land northwest of Los Angeles. Some people who had been forced to flee days ago were settling back in. Wieke Meulenkamp, a mother of two young daughters, had gathered her family, valuables and two dogs and fled the flames, staying with friends for three days. They returned on Sunday to their home in the mountaintop community of Painted Cave near Santa Barbara. "It looks pretty good now," she said. "But you're never out of danger up here."
[Associated
Press;
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