The
Mendocino Complex Fire grew to 157,450 acres (63,700 hectares)
late Friday, about half the size of Los Angeles, forcing nearly
16,000 homeowners to flee a blaze that has destroyed 88
structures about 93 miles (150 km) north of San Francisco,
according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection (CalFire).
Its size overtook the deadly Carr Fire, about 100 miles (160 km)
to the northeast, which is among 17 major blazes burning in
tinder-dry forests and woodland peppered with dead trees from
the state's 2011-2017 drought.
The Carr Fire spawned a "fire whirl" of flames and winds in
excess of 143 mph (230 kph) on July 26 that had the strength of
a severe tornado and uprooted trees and toppled power lines,
according to a tweet by the National Weather Service.
Fueled by triple-digit temperatures, the blazes have put
California on track for its most destructive fire year since
2008, in terms of area burned, said Cal Fire Deputy Chief Scott
McLean.
"These fires are just unpredictable and extremely dangerous.
They've killed, they're killers," said McLean. "It's going to go
through you, around you, over you."
Four wildland firefighters have died in California this year,
twice as many as in all of 2017.
They included a bulldozer operator whose vehicle nearly slipped
off a mountain trail three times before it rolled into a ravine
and crushed him at the Ferguson Fire near Yosemite National
Park, a Cal Fire report said. The report called for better "risk
assessment" among firefighters.
Several days of light winds have helped teams control smaller
blazes, but they faced a "red flag" warning for increasing winds
and heightened fire danger going into the weekend.
Firefighters from 16 states have rushed to California, and
authorities were reinforcing 3,232 personnel on the Mendocino
Complex Fire, which is made up of two blazes.
The Carr Fire is 39-percent contained, but firefighters are
widening fire breaks to prevent winds from causing it to flare
up again. It has destroyed 1,567 homes and other structures and
blackened 133,924 acres (54,197 hectares), making it the sixth
most destructive California wildfire on record.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico, with additional
reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Jonathan Oatis
and Sandra Maler)
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