1,400 California Wildfires Burning With No Relief In Sight

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SCOTT LINDLAW | June 30, 2008 10:54 PM EST | AP

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A 450-acre wildfire caused the evacuation of 120 people from the town of about 400 scattered homes and summer cabins in the mountain community of Crown King, Ariz., and the smoke could be seen Sunday, June 29, 2008, in Black Canyon City, Ariz., in the foreground. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

SAN FRANCISCO — With hundreds of wildfires raging across remote, rugged parts of California for a second week, fire officials have been forced to strategically choose which to fight and which to leave to burn for weeks or even months.

The number of fires burning in central and Northern California _ more than 1,000 according to state fire officials _ means authorities can't send firefighters to battle every blaze, Jason Kirchner, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service, said Monday.

"It's like eating an elephant _ you've got to eat it one bite at a time," he said.

It's also impossible to attack wildfires in some rugged, remote areas because the risk to firefighters is too great, he said.

"We have to take a step back, figure out where the best place is to make a stand and sometimes wait for the fire to come to us in those situations," he said. "We've got to pick the battles we can win."

Long-running wildfires are not unusual in California. It was four months before firefighters controlled a blaze that blackened more than 240,000 acres of Santa Barbara County backcountry last year.

What is extraordinary this year is the number of fires burning at the same time, Kirchner said. The weekend of June 21, some 1,200 fires were burning _ a figure Forest Service officials said appeared to be an all-time record in California.

The Forest Service put the figure at about 600 on Monday. It attributed the gains to its tactic of attacking small fires first, and to significant assistance from other states and Canada.

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State officials, however, counted more than 1,000 ongoing blazes. The source of the discrepancy was apparently a different counting method.

Also unusual, Kirchner said, was that there have been no significant injuries to civilians or firefighters even though some 570 square miles have burned in California this season. There were, however, a few minor injuries as harsh terrain hampered firefighters' efforts to battle a blaze in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest.

"It is extremely steep, very rugged territory, and there are a lot of injuries, twisting ankles, slipping on hills," Kirchner said. Burning debris is "rolling downhill right past your containment line. It's very complicated, difficult, dirty firefighting work."

Even so, firefighters managed to increase their containment of that 30,000-acre fire from 15 to 23 percent.

Two wildfires choked parts of the Sierra Nevada foothills, sending up plumes of smoke that darkened patches of the 100-mile stretch between Sacramento and Reno.

The fires in the Tahoe National Forest blanketed portions of the Interstate 80 corridor linking the two cities and the foothill communities in between where tens of thousands of people live.

Along the Pacific, fire officials said fog and humidity helped them gain ground against a blaze that was just 3 percent contained in the storied town of Big Sur. John Heil, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service, said it had blackened about 39,600 acres.

Firefighters poured personnel and equipment into the area to ensure the fire did not reach the town, said John Ahlman, a spokesman for the Los Padres National Forest.

Heil said there was a possibility of rain in the far northern part of the state this week. But the changing weather pattern could also bring new lightning and high winds, which could touch off new blazes and fan the current ones, he said.

"Unless it rains, and we get some really good rainfall, you can pretty much expect it to be here right through October," he said.

In Arizona, a wildfire that had burned more than 6 square miles of wilderness crept within 500 feet of the remote mountain community of Crown King north of Phoenix, officials said Monday. Three homes and four other structures had been destroyed, but it was unclear when, authorities said. About 120 residents voluntarily evacuated Sunday.

Crews in central New Mexico's Manzano Mountains were doing mop-up operations Monday on an almost 9-square-mile fire that destroyed six homes and 10 outbuildings. Residents who left last week were allowed to return Sunday. The fire, started by lightning June 23, was 95 percent contained.

In Guffey, Colo., about 40 miles west of Colorado Springs, most of the 100 residents who fled a 1,115-acre lightning-started wildfire were allowed back Sunday. Final evacuation orders were lifted Monday.

SAN FRANCISCO — With hundreds of wildfires raging across remote, rugged parts of California for a second week, fire officials have been forced to strategically choose which to fight and which to...
SAN FRANCISCO — With hundreds of wildfires raging across remote, rugged parts of California for a second week, fire officials have been forced to strategically choose which to fight and which to...
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- strangelet I'm a Fan of strangelet 27 fans permalink

And, a big thanks again to all the firefighters out there all day every day in 95 degree weather (not counting the fire).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 07/01/2008
- mergina I'm a Fan of mergina 96 fans permalink
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Year after year, with pick and shovel and ax and chainsaw, brave men and women head towards the inevitable fires in California, fires that seem to be getting more frequent, more numerous, and more destructive. We watch as planes and helicopters dump what appears to be the equivalent of a thimble full of water on a raging inferno. They fly by with beautifully coloured pink retardant, and still we watch what appears to be little or no effect to fires larger than ever, and fueled into a frenzy by drought and high winds.

The technology is HERE NOW, to create an ARSENAL for fighting large outdoor fires, but it does not get created, for what reason, WHO KNOWS?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 PM on 06/30/2008
- strangelet I'm a Fan of strangelet 27 fans permalink

This is a real question. What ARSENAL are you describing? These fires are miles into almost impassable terrain. The means I know of to fight them are (1) water, which has to be brought in by pump or aircraft over a distance of some miles; (2) retardant, typically airdropped, to slow up the spread; and (3) physical firebreaks, which is what most of the firefighters are trying to create.

If there is another technology that would help, we would all like to know what it is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 AM on 07/01/2008

Maybe this should convince many of you that brush clearing and cutting down trees to stop this from the future is necessary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 PM on 06/30/2008
- strangelet I'm a Fan of strangelet 27 fans permalink

Already convinced, Red, but most of the current lightning strike fires are WAY out in the boonies, Who would do the brush clearing?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 AM on 07/01/2008
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 157 fans permalink

Sincere deepest sympathy to everyone involved and affected. These wildfires are frightening, dangerous, and ruinous. We had one come within a mile of our house once, and family members have had them come within feet of their house.
It is natural to wonder, "why not remove combustibles from near residences?" However, firestorms are not like normal fires. They can send balls of flame, heat, and embers hundreds of yards in any direction, and anything touched by these fireballs will most likely (unless buried under fireretardant foam) explode in flame.
We seem to be in a period of extreme dryness, perhaps associated with global warming, but whatever the cause, to have all of these fires so early in the summer indicates that we are in for a very bad fire season. From now until late November, we can expect firestorms whereever there is enough dried out vegetation to feed the flames.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 06/30/2008
- ecotopian I'm a Fan of ecotopian 15 fans permalink
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And thanks to strong southerly winds, the smoke is now in Oregon. If you've seen any of the footage from the Olympic Trials in Eugene and have noticed a haze, that's the smoke from those fires. The air quality is still all right, but visibility is down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 PM on 06/30/2008
- pcplz I'm a Fan of pcplz 7 fans permalink
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Does anyone know if Occidental is on fire??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 PM on 06/30/2008
- marymac I'm a Fan of marymac 21 fans permalink

Here is a state map to check on Occidental. It looks ok right now.

http://www.oes.ca.gov/WebPage/oeswebsite.nsf/InteractiveMap?readForm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 PM on 06/30/2008
- strangelet I'm a Fan of strangelet 27 fans permalink

Nah. One of the restaurants had a pasta conflagration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 07/01/2008
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