MASSIVE CALIFORNIA FIRE FORCES 1MILLION TO FLEE
OCT 22 2007
Raging
California Wildfires Force 1 Million to Flee...
More Than 346,000 Homes Evacuated as Wildfires
Burn 373,000 Acres, or
Faced with unrelenting winds whipping
wildfires into a frenzy across Southern California, firefighters all but
conceded defeat Tuesday to an unstoppable force that has already chased nearly
a million people away.
Unless the shrieking Santa Ana winds subside, and that's not expected for at
least another day, fire crews say they can do little more than try to wait it
out and react tamping out spot fires and chasing ribbons of airborne embers to
keep new fires from flaring.
"If it's this big and blowing with as much wind as it's got, it'll go all the
way to the ocean before it stops," said San Diego Fire Capt. Kirk Humphries.
"We can save some stuff but we can't stop it."
Tentacles of unpredictable, shifting flame have burned across nearly 600
square miles, killing two people, destroying more than 1,300 homes and
prompting one of the biggest evacuations in California history, from north of
Los Angeles, through San Diego to the Mexican border.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said the flames were threatening 68,000 more homes.
"We have had an unfortunate situation that we've had three things come
together: very dry areas, very hot weather and then a lot of wind,"
Schwarzenegger said. "And so this makes the perfect storm for a fire."
In Rancho Santa Fe, a suburb north of San Diego, houses burned just yards from
where fire crews fought to contain flames engulfing other properties. In the
mountain community of Lake Arrowhead, cabins and vacation homes went up in
flames with no fire crews in sight.
"These winds are so strong, we're not trying to fight this fire," said
firefighter Jim Gelrud, an engineer from Vista, Calif. "We're just trying to
save the buildings."
More than a dozen wildfires blowing across Southern California since Sunday
have killed two people and forced the evacuation of more than 350,000 houses,
encompassing nearly 950,000 people based on average household size. More than
40 people have been injured, including 16 firefighters.
President Bush, who planned to visit the region Thursday, declared a federal
emergency for seven counties, a move that will speed disaster-relief efforts.
The sweeping devastation was reminiscent of blazes that tore through Southern
California four years ago, killing 22 and destroying 3,640 homes.
The ferocity of the Santa Ana winds in 2003 forced crews to discard their
traditional strategy and focus on keeping up with the fire and putting out
spot blazes that threatened homes.
Fire crews were especially concerned about dense eucalyptus groves in Del Mar
and Rancho Santa Fe, fearing the highly flammable trees could turn
neighborhoods prized for their secluded serenity into potential tinderboxes.
The usual tactic is to surround a fire on two sides and try to choke it off.
But with fires whipped by gusts that have surpassed 100 mph, that strategy
doesn't work because embers can be swept miles ahead of the fire's front line.
In those cases, crews must keep 10 to 30 feet back from the flames or risk
their own lives, Los Angeles County firefighter Daryl Parish said.
Any flame longer than 8 feet is considered unstoppable,
and even water and fire retardant will evaporate before they reach the ground,
said Gordon Schmidt, a retired U.S. Forest Service deputy director of fire
management.
"In these situations, the strategy generally is to fall back," he said. "You
pick and choose your priorities in terms of what you can protect. Instead of
trying to stop the fire, you try to prevent it from burning resources."
In the suburbs north of San Diego, firefighters did just that as fingers of
flame pulsed across a 10-lane freeway and raced up a hill on the opposite side
in just seconds. The fire engulfed white-washed homes at the top of the ridge.
Groves of eucalyptus trees exploded in the heat in one ritzy cul-de-sac in
Rancho Santa Fe, sending off a scattered popping that sounded like machine gun
fire.
Firefighters parked their rigs in the driveways of the most threatened homes
and hosed down fences and open space around homes as a blood-red sun set over
a sky choked with smoke and falling ash.
Firefighters battling two fast-moving blazes in Lake Arrowhead, in the San
Bernardino Mountains about 130 miles east of Los Angeles, were also taxed by
steep terrain, winding roads and a forest packed with dead or dying trees.
More than 200 homes burned in Lake Arrowhead and Running Springs, fire
officials said.
At least three times in the past two days, fire crews have been forced to
"pull off, and wait for things to calm down" because of danger, said San
Bernardino National Forest Ranger Kurt Winchester.
"In a lot of places, you just have to back off and let the fire go," he said.
"There's nothing we can do."
In Rancho Santa Fe, neighbors tried to protect a friend's home with a garden
hose Monday night as flames raced up a ridge directly behind the house. Yards
away, an engine crew kept watch as another home, already fully engulfed,
burned to the ground.
"We told the firemen about (this house) and we put out a few hot spots," said
friend Gary Rich. "They told us once they put out that house, they'd come over
here."
But, Rich said, encroaching flames were making him nervous and he might leave
before then.
Fighting a gusty blaze also puts the firefighters in harm's way. At least
twice in the last two days, firefighters have had to unfurl their emergency
fire shelters small fire-resistant tents to shield them when they can't escape
a fire.
Weather conditions only grew worse, with temperatures across Southern
California about 10 degrees above average. Temperatures were in the 90s by
mid-afternoon and wind gusts up to 60 mph were expected in mountains and
canyons.
In the San Diego suburb of Del Dios, fire completely destroyed one home but
seemed to touch other items at random. Two lawn chairs and an umbrella were
left in a burnt, melted heap on the patio.
But behind the house, near a murky brown
swimming pool, two chaise lounges and a four-foot-tall decorative fountain
survived unscathed.
J.C. Playford, an evacuee from the nearby community of Ramona, surveyed the
damage and wondered whether his own home was still standing.
"I've got two reports, one person told me it's gone, and one person said it's
still there," he said, "So I have no idea.
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