More than 900 households in Sherman and Wasco counties have been
told to evacuate immediately or to be ready to leave as the
so-called Substation Fire grew 40 percent to 50,000 acres
(20,200 hectares) on Wednesday, fire officials said on Facebook.
A Red Flag warning from the National Weather Service was in
effect for the area on Thursday because of forecast winds of up
to 30 miles (48 km) per hour and humidity in the teens.
On Wednesday, crews found a charred tractor and the remains
nearby of its driver who was trying to clear brush in Wasco
County, sheriff's officials said on the department's Facebook
page.
The blaze prompted Oregon Governor Kate Brown to declare an
emergency in the area.
The United States is facing an unusually active wildfire year,
with some 3.4 million acres already charred this year, more than
the year-to-date average of about 3 million acres over the past
decade.
In California, one firefighter broke a leg and a second was
treated for heat-related illness, after fighting the so-called
Ferguson Fire burning on the western boundary of Yosemite
National Park in the Sierra Nevada mountains, a U.S. Forest
Service spokesman said.
The California injuries came as crews made a major push to cut
containment lines around the 17,300-acre conflagration before
thunderstorms forecast for this week further whip up the flames.
Fire officials issued evacuation orders and advisories for the
mountain communities of Jerseydale, Mariposa Pines, Clearing
House and Incline while closing State Route 140 and a Yosemite
park entrance.
Complicating firefighting efforts was an inversion layer of
thick black smoke, visible for miles, that has prevented
water-dropping aircraft from flying into narrow canyons.
"While the smoke lifted early, it re-settled in the late
afternoon, again hampering visibility and grounding aircraft,"
fire officials said in an alert on Wednesday.
A firefighter was killed on Saturday fighting the blaze,
according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection.
California has had its worst start to the fire season in a
decade, with more than 220,421 acres (89,200 hectares) blackened
and six major wildfires burning statewide as of Wednesday.
(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing
by Matthew Mpoke Bigg)
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