Crews fight to outflank raging Northern
California wildfire
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[September 10, 2018]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Firefighters
battled on Saturday to outflank a wildfire that has forced the closure
of an interstate highway in Northern California as the blaze swept
through explosively dry mountain timber in the Shasta-Trinity National
Forest for a fourth day.
As of late Saturday, the Delta Fire had scorched more than 40,500 acres
(16,839 hectares) in the Cascade range since erupting on Wednesday in a
forest canyon along the Sacramento River, about 250 miles (402 km) north
of San Francisco, fire officials said.
No serious injuries or deaths have been reported, but the blaze has
caused major travel disruptions. On Wednesday, flames raced across
Interstate 5, chasing a number of truckers from their vehicles before
flames engulfed their abandoned rigs.
A 45-mile (72-km) stretch of the I-5, a key north-south route through
the entire state, has remained closed since then, requiring traffic
detours of up to 120 miles (193 km).
Although containment of the blaze, a measure of the progress made in
carving buffers around the fire's perimeter to halt its spread, remained
at zero, crews have made gains clearing away tinder-dry brush beyond its
leading edge.
Firefighters were using natural barriers like roadways and ridges to set
up control lines, which will allow them to burn away fuel ahead of the
wildfire to slow its growth, Captain Brandon Vaccaro, a spokesman for
the Delta fire incident command, said.
"The topography here is very steep, with a lot of canyons and valleys
that make it very difficult for firefighters to work," he said.
Much of the effort has also focused on protecting scattered homes and
small communities in the sparsely populated fire zone. Two single-family
homes have been destroyed, and two other buildings damaged, Vaccaro
said.
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Smoke rises as the large fire spread along Pope Valley in
California, U.S., September 8, 2018 in this picture obtained on
September 8, 2018 from social media. Craig Philpott/via REUTERS
Approximately 150 people were under mandatory evacuation orders in
Shasta and Trinity counties, Vaccaro said. Farther north, an
evacuation warning was in effect for the town of Dunsmuir, advising
some 1,600 residents to be ready to flee at a moment's notice.
Cooler temperatures and higher humidity arrived overnight on Friday,
providing a bit of a respite from the scorching weather that has
hampered firefighting this week.
Forecasters at the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction
Center in College Park Maryland said temperatures are expected to
slowly drop from a high of 96 degrees Fahrenheit (35.6°C) Sunday to
a high of 83 degrees Fahrenheit (28.3°C) by Tuesday.
Shasta County communities are still recovering from a devastating
blaze this summer that killed eight people and incinerated hundreds
of dwellings in and around Redding.
(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee, Rich McKay in
Atlanta and Joseph Ax in New York; Editing by Alexander Smith and
Diane Craft)
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