California 'fire tornado' forced
residents to flee in chaos
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[August 01, 2018]
By Rollo Ross
REDDING, Calif. (Reuters) - The "fire
tornado" that ripped through Northern California last week forced
residents to flee their homes chaotically, many with their pets and
little else, people sheltering in Red Cross evacuation centers said.
The blaze, the seventh most destructive in California history, roared
suddenly into Redding and adjacent communities after being whipped by
gale-force winds into a fire storm that jumped the Sacramento River.
The erratic blaze forced 38,000 people from their homes. Most of them
are staying at hotels or with friends and relatives. But nearly 300 are
at Red Cross shelters in the Redding area, including retired firefighter
Steven Bailey.
Bailey and others at the shelter said the fire's towering inferno
bewildered them.
"It's tough being on the other side. Being on the engine and going in,
that was tough but it was a different type of tough when you get told to
leave and you don't know anything, yeah, so it's different. I don't wish
anyone to have to experience (it)."
Rob McDonald said he left his home in Shasta County hoping the fire
would not make it up the hill where he lives, taking only a few personal
items with him.
"Wish I would have grabbed a few other things. I was thinking it wasn't
going to get up there, it was a just 'in-case' thing. And it did. And so
I'm in limbo, total limbo as to what's going on up there," McDonald
said.
As the fire approached, people grabbed what they could. For many, that
included their furry friends.
Volunteers set up a special hall at the Shasta College evacuation center
to cater for people with pets, not only dogs and cats but also rats,
pot-bellied pigs and a giant tortoise.
Frank Williams, who managed to bring his dogs but had to leave his pet
birds behind, was emotional when recalling how noisy the animals were
when they arrived last Friday.
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A burned out home in the small community of Keswick is shown from
wildfire damage near Redding, California, U.S., July 27, 2018.
REUTERS/Alexandria Sage
"I can tell you about how quiet it was last night, after the animals
being stressed from when we got in here on Friday. You could have
heard a pin drop, finally, last night because all the animals were
dead tired from barking," Williams said.
Wildfire evacuations have become a fact of life in California, which
is bearing the brunt of an extreme run of wildfires across the U.S.
West.
At least 10,000 people have been dislodged in Mendocino County in
California's wine country from two wildfires. Hundreds were
evacuated from the Cranston Fire in Riverside County east of Los
Angeles last week.
Erratic winds and record high temperatures have fueled blazes that
blackened nearly 410,000 acres in California, the state's highest
year-to-date level in a decade.
(Reporting by Rollo Ross; Writing by Bill Tarrant; editing by Grant
McCool)
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