California wildfires likely to worsen as
season peaks: forecaster
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[August 03, 2016]
(Reuters) - Drought conditions in
California risk stoking new and ongoing wildfires as the season enters
its peak, a forecaster said on Wednesday after several blazes already
killed at least six people and charred thousands of acres so far this
year.
The warning came as 5,500 firefighters battled a wildfire near the Big
Sur coast, a well-known tourist destination. Dubbed the Soberanes Fire,
it has scorched some 44,000 acres (17,800 hectares) and dozens of homes
in the area, fire officials said.
Little rain and the strong, dry Santa Ana winds will likely stoke more
wildfires as the peak of the wildfire season begins, AccuWeather said.
The wildfire season officially begins in May and stretches into
September.
"It's bad now and it's only going to get worse," long-range forecaster
Paul Pastelok said.
The Soberanes Fire began on July 22 and was sparked by an illegal,
unattended camp fire in a section in Garrapata State Park that was
closed to camping, the U.S. Forest Service said on Tuesday. No arrests
have been made, the service said.
Fire personnel battling the blaze have been able to draw containment
lines - a measure of how much of its perimeter has been cleared by fire
crews of unburned vegetation - around only 25 percent of the wildfire so
far.
A bulldozer operator hired by property owners to help battle the
Soberanes blaze died last week when his vehicle rolled over. It was the
second wildfire-related death in California in a week, another person
having been found dead in his car in the path of the Sand Fire in Los
Angeles County. Four people were killed in other blazes in June.
The fire threat has prompted the closure of several popular California
campgrounds and recreation areas along the northern end of the Big Sur
coastline, including Point Lobos State Natural Reserve and Pfeiffer Big
Sur State Park.
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A firefighter stands on steep terrain while fire crews create fire
breaks at Garrapata State Park during the Soberanes Fire north of
Big Sur, California, U.S. July 31, 2016. REUTERS/Michael Fiala
Another fire that broke out on Saturday in grass and brush about 30
miles northeast of Fresno, in central California, has since charred
about 2,185 acres and is threatening 400 structures, prompting
evacuations in the area, the California Department of Forestry and
Fire Protection said.
Nine structures, including four homes, have been destroyed, fire
officials said. On Tuesday evening, the so-called Goose Fire was
listed as 60 percent contained.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky)
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