Crews battling deadly California wildfire
slowed by returning winds
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[August 03, 2018]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Crews battling a deadly
wildfire in northern California faced a resurgence of gusty winds on
Thursday, hampering progress they were making this week to keep the
blaze from spreading further.
The 11-day-old Carr Fire, which has scorched nearly 127,000 acres
(54,000 hectares) in the scenic Shasta-Trinity region north of
Sacramento, remains the largest and most fearsome of 18 significant
wildfires burning across California and more than 100 nationwide.
After three days of light winds that had helped firefighters make
significant headway, a "red flag" warning for heightened fire danger was
posted on Thursday, citing increasing winds in the forecast through
Saturday.
Strong gusts began kicking up again on Wednesday night across upper
ridge lines of the fire's mountainous western flank, where the blaze,
sparked by a vehicle malfunction on July 23, was still burning largely
unchecked.
Those gusts were slowing efforts in the steep, rugged terrain to carve
out buffer zones in front of the fire's leading edge, said Gabriel
Lauderdale, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and
Fire Protection (CalFire).
With high winds expected to worsen, throwing hot embers over containment
lines, "we could continue to see those conditions pose difficulty for us
into the night-time hours," he told Reuters by telephone. A CalFire
status update issued hours later said that "low relative humidity and an
unstable atmosphere have increased fire behavior."
The blaze, stoked by drought-parched vegetation and triple-digit
temperatures, has killed six people and reduced 1,555 structures to
smoldering ruins, including 10,600 homes. It ranks as the sixth most
destructive California wildfire on record.
Firefighters were fighting to keep flames from spilling over a ridge
dividing Shasta and Trinity counties. Failure to hold that line would
put the evacuated town of Lewiston, just 3 miles to the west, in harm's
way, said Lauderdale at CalFire.
Over 4,300 personnel assigned to the blaze have carved containment lines
around 37 percent of the perimeter of the blaze.
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Wind-driven flames roll over a hill towards homes during the River
Fire (Mendocino Complex) near Lakeport, California, U.S. August 2,
2018. REUTERS/Fred Greaves
Lauderdale said 24,285 residents remained displaced as of Thursday
morning - down from a peak of 38,000 - but the number was dwindling
as more residents were allowed to return.
Scott McLean, another CalFire spokesman, said roughly 40,000 people
were under evacuation orders statewide, many from a pair of fires
burning close together at the southern end of the Mendocino National
Forest.
More than 100 large wildfires were burning across 13 Western states,
having consumed more than 1.4 million (582,000 hectares), according
to the National Interagency Fire Center.
An estimated 27,000 firefighters have been deployed throughout the
West, with California alone accounting for 13,000 of them, CalFire
director Ken Pimlott said this week. Many of the fire personnel were
being sent from out of state.
On Thursday, a special contingent of 100 firefighters from Australia
and New Zealand took off from Sydney en route to U.S. assignments
reinforcing exhausted fire crews in northern California, Oregon and
Washington state.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; additional reporting by
Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; editing by Grant McCool & Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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