Fast-spreading California wildfire forces
evacuations in Yolo County
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[July 02, 2018]
By Jon Herskovitz
(Reuters) - A fast-growing wildfire that
broke out over the weekend in Northern California, fueled by parched
lands and high winds, prompted evacuations on Sunday and sent ash
spewing over a wide area of the region, officials said.
More than 1,200 people were fighting the so-called County Fire, located
about 75 miles (120 kms) northeast of San Francisco. It has blazed
through around 32,500 acres (13,150 hectares) and was 2 percent
contained as of Sunday evening, officials said.
The sky turned orange in parts of the San Francisco Bay area due to the
blaze, with many residents waking up to a thin coating of ash on
windows, cars and lawns.
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Residents in some rural areas of Yolo County were ordered to leave their
homes as the flames advanced, according to the California Department of
Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire.
"It's going to be headed into some populated areas of small communities
in the near future if it is not curtailed," Cal Fire spokesman Scott
McLean said in an interview.
As of June 29 of this year, wildfires have burned through nearly 2.5
million acres (1 million hectares) in the United States, well above the
average of about 2 million acres for the same calendar period over the
last 10 years, according to the National Interagency Fire Center, a
monitoring group.
Parched conditions in the U.S. West and Southwest have led to a rash of
wildfires this year, with about 40 major blazes burning as of the end of
June in an area from Washington State to New Mexico, the agency said.
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Flames rise from a treeline near an emergency vehicle during efforts
to contain the Spring Creek Fire in Costilla County, Colorado, U.S.
June 27, 2018. Costilla County Sheriff's Office/Handout via REUTERS
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More than 9,000 firefighters and 100 helicopters have been
dispatched to battle the various blazes, cutting containment lines
on the ground and dropping fire retardant from the air, the agency
said.
California and Colorado have been hard hit this year, with the
largest wildfire in Colorado, the 416 Fire, charring almost 47,000
acres about 13 miles (21 km) north of Durango in the southwestern
part of the state. It is 37 percent contained, according to state
data.
An ongoing drought across much of the Southwest and West and a ridge
of warm air that can produce high winds have made the area
susceptible to wildfires, said Scott Marsh, a meteorologist with the
U.S. National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center in Norman,
Oklahoma.
"In a drought-stricken area, once you get a spark, it is off to the
races," he said.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Paul Simao & Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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