Clayton Fire Destroys California Home |
Northern California's Clayton Fire Destroys More than 175 Buildings, Chars 4,000 Acres, Forces Thousands to Evacuate.
Araging wildfire that has destroyed more than 175 buildings in Northern California swelled to 4,000 acres on Monday, forcing residents to flee their lake community as homes and businesses burned to the ground.
By
Monday evening, the Clayton fire was only 5% contained, according to the state
Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Gov.
Jerry Brown issued a state of emergency for Lake County, where the blaze has
forced the entire community of Lower Lake — more than 100 miles north of San
Francisco — to evacuate. The governor’s order will help expedite aid to those
affected by the fire.
The
fire broke out late Saturday afternoon off Highway 29 and Clayton Creek Road,
then doubled in size on Sunday as it reached Main Street in Lower Lake. There,
flames ripped through the post office, a winery, a Habitat for Humanity office
and several other businesses, the Associated Press reported. Sixteen patients
at a hospital in nearby Clearlake had to be transferred to a facility about 25
miles away.
"You
can’t imagine what took place", Cal Fire spokesman Scott McLean said.
There was extreme fire behavior and winds that pushed it across the road into
structure after structure after structure. We had airplanes dropping retardant,
helicopters dropping thousands of gallons of water — trying to get ahead of
this.
After
destroying four homes before sunrise on Monday, the pace of the fire’s growth
slowed, according to Lake County law enforcement officials. Firefighters spent
the day working to bulldoze a ring around the fire area, while helicopters and
tankers dropped retardant and water.
The count of destroyed structures remained at 175,
mostly concentrated in Lower Lake’s small, single-street commercial
district. But along the wooded ridge behind the shoreline community, dark
plumes rose occasionally during the day — a signal that flames overtook another
structure or vehicle.
The state’s lingering drought has hit Lake County
particularly hard and contributed to the rapid spread of flames, fire officials
said.
Daytime high temperatures in Lake County, near the
fire, are expected to hover around 100 degrees through mid-week, said Eric
Kurth, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento. By
Thursday, the area should cool slightly, with high temperatures Friday and
through the weekend projected in the lower 90s, he said.
The evenings are expected to be cooler, with
temperatures forecast in the upper 60s, but they’re “definitely warm evenings,”
Kurth said.
“It’s nothing that’s extraordinary, not
record-setting, but it is hot — it’s seasonably hot,” Kurth said.
The Clayton fire is burning in an area between last
year’s devastating Valley, Rocky and Jerusalem fires, which broke out
around the Lower Lake area.
Nearly 200 people forced out of their homes in Lower
Lake spent Sunday night in an American Red Cross shelter set up at Twin
Pine Casino & Hotel in nearby Middletown — a tiny town that was
itself ravaged by the Valley fire,
one of the worst fires in California history, just 11 months ago.
The casino was certainly ready: The Red Cross had left
behind two trailers of cots and care kits when it pulled out of town last year,
and the casino had opened itself up as a fire shelter even before being
declared one, said Kyle Lewis, a spokesman for the casino.
“Fire survivors” as they’re called locally
— people who lost their homes to last year’s fires — had lived
for months in the casino and hotel. The last of them had left just a few weeks
ago, Lewis said. And now the hotel is full again with members of the Middletown
Rancheria of Pomo Indians of California (which owns and operates the facility)
and casino employees forced out of their homes by the Clayton fire.
The back-to-back wildfires have changed how Lewis, 37,
a relative newcomer, views life in the rolling hills of Lake County. He
was forced from his home last year for a week and considers himself lucky to
have just had superficial property damage. He knows many others who lost
their homes.
“I think it has made us a very strong community that I
am very proud of,” he said.
At Hardester’s Market & Hardware, which has
anchored Middletown since 1943, clerks said they had already met their first
double-fire survivors: a family burned out of Middletown by the Valley fire
just lost their new home in Lower Lake just up the road. A cashier at the
flower stand wondered aloud, as many in the community are doing, if the Clayton
fire was arson.
We’ve always had fires, but never this big,” she said.
“And in the anniversary of the last three.”
Store owner Ross Hardester said Lake County residents
are devastated to be going through such loss again.
“There was such a good buzz; we were starting to
recover,” he said. The town was swept by flames last year and had gotten
through the first bleak month, and then the painful Christmas holidays, and was
starting to see permits being issued and new homes going up on charred lots.
“Now this,” Hardester said. “So many people are on
edge again.”
Tessie Espinosa fled her Lower Lake house the moment
she saw smoke.
“We’ve learned that you can’t trust for warnings to
get out,” she said.
Espinosa is an administrator for the senior center in
Middletown, where elderly clients interrupted her every few minutes Monday for
updates on what was destroyed the night before and what was still standing in
Lower Lake. Her tone was light and reassuring — but on the “I am not sure”
list is her own house.
She pulled out her phone and showed a state map of the
four major fires that have affected the region. She pointed at a small,
unburned area in the center.
“That’s where we live,” she said.
The Clayton fire is one of several wildfires
burning throughout California.
The Chimney fire that broke out near Lake
Nacimiento in San Luis Obispo County has burned 5,400 acres, destroyed 12
structures and is threatening 200 more, Cal Fire said Monday.
Citing the Chimney fire’s damage to homes and critical
infrastructure, Brown also issued a state of emergency for San Luis Obispo
County.
Evacuations have taken place in a handful of
communities, including Running Deer Ranch and Cal Shasta. Two people have been
injured by the blaze.
The fire was first reported about 4 p.m. Saturday near
the intersection of Running Deer and Chimney Rock roads, according to Cal Fire.
Active through the night, the fire was slowed about 1
a.m. by air pressure at a higher elevation pushing down and trapping cooler
temperatures, Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant said. This blanket, known as an
inversion layer, prevents smoke from rising and decelerates any flames.
Once that inversion layer began to lift Sunday, the
Chimney fire increased in activity, prompting officials to bring in additional
firefighters and resources from across the region.
Berlant said several hundred fire personnel were on
the scene, as well as large air tankers.
“It’s been burning this afternoon at an explosive
rate,” he said.
The fire was 10% contained.
The Soberanes fire, a deadly blaze burning north of
Big Sur, has wiped out nearly 60 homes, burned more than 74,600 acres and
claimed the life of a bulldozer operator.
Cal Fire officials said the fire, which was started by
an illegal campfire, was 60% contained.
The wildfires underscore the elevated risks
Southern California faces as it endures yet another summer heat wave, which
forecasters say will continue until Wednesday.
The combination of very hot, dry and windy conditions
increases the potential for wildfires in the mountains of Ventura and Los
Angeles counties, as well as in the foothills in Antelope Valley, said Rich
Thompson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.
Several Southland communities saw triple-digit
temperatures over the weekend, including Van Nuys, Chatsworth and Palm Springs.
On Sunday, temperatures hit 104 in Woodland Hills and 111 in Thermal.
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