California firefighters struggle to slow
Big Sur blaze
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[August 01, 2016]
By Michael Fiala
CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA, Calif. (Reuters) -
Firefighters struggled on Sunday to slow a deadly wildfire that has
raged for 10 days near California's Big Sur coast, destroying dozens of
homes and forcing the evacuation of hundreds of residents and campers,
authorities said.
The so-called Soberanes Fire, which erupted on July 22 just south of
Carmel-by-the-Sea, has grown to 40,000 acres (16,187 hectares) of
parched chaparral and timberland in and around the Los Padres National
Forest.
"Firefighters are meeting challenges due to topography, fuel load, and
dry humidity," said Katherine Garver, a spokeswoman for the California
Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire). "The fire is
making runs into inaccessible areas."
Officials ordered evacuations for the famous Tassajara Zen Mountain
Center in Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park and other areas on Sunday
afternoon.
They had hoped that favorable weather conditions would allow progress to
be made in containing the blaze, with strong winds that had been driving
the fire for days starting to abate.
By Sunday night, 18 percent of the fire's perimeter was contained, a
slight increase from earlier in the day, officials said.
Extremely hot, dry weather is still hampering the efforts of some 5,300
firefighters, 16 helicopters, a half dozen air tankers and 500 fire
engines.
Officials do not expect the fire to be fully contained until the end of
August because parts of it are burning in steep and inaccessible
terrain. Its cause is under investigation.
Flames have already destroyed 57 homes and 11 outbuildings, with at
least five other structures damaged, according to the latest tally.
Another 2,000 structures were threatened, with an estimated 350
residents displaced by evacuations unrelated to those in the area of the
Zen Center, officials said.
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Firefighters use an axe to extinguish hotspots during the Soberanes
Fire in the mountains above Carmel Highlands, California, U.S. July
28, 2016. REUTERS/Michael Fiala
The fire threat has prompted authorities to close a string of
popular California campgrounds and recreation areas along the
northern end of the Big Sur coastline, including Point Lobos Natural
Reserve.
The blaze took a deadly turn on Tuesday when a bulldozer operator
hired by property owners to help battle the flames was killed when
his tractor rolled over. It was the second California
wildfire-related death in a week.
Another fire broke out on Saturday in grass and brush about 30 miles
(48 km) northeast of Fresno, in central California, and has since
spread to 1,500 acres (607 hectares), threatening 200 homes,
according to Cal Fire.
(Writing and additional reporting by Frank McGurty in New York,
Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles,
California; Editing by Sandra Maler, Paul Simao and Paul Tait)
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