Evacuations Ordered As Winds Fuel Northern California Fires
GUINDA (AP) -- Evacuations were ordered as dry, hot winds fueled a wildfire burning out of control Sunday in rural Northern California, sending a stream of smoke some 75 miles south into the Bay Area.
The fast-moving blaze that broke out Saturday in western Yolo County charred at least 50 square miles (129 square kilometers) of dry brush and threatened more than 100 structures in ranchland northwest of Sacramento.
As it stands, Cal Fire reports 2 percent containment Sunday night.
The County Fire started at 2:12 p.m. today in the Guinda area of Yolo County about 15 miles north of Lake Berryessa.
No injuries were reported and the exact number of people evacuated was unclear. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said Sunday night that there was 2 percent containment.
Autumn Edens marveled as a huge plume blocked the sun while she drove to her job as manager of the Corner Store in Guinda, a town of about 250 people just north of the fire.
"You can see the smoke and you can see an orange-red glow from the flames. It looks like a movie," she said. "I've never seen a fire like that up close and it's an intense feeling."
It was one of two major wildfires in the northern part of the state, where temperatures were soaring, humidity was dropping and winds were steady.
A blaze burning for several days to the west in Lake County jumped containment lines Saturday, prompting additional evacuation orders. That fire was more than 70 percent contained after charring about 22 square miles (57 square kilometers) of brush and destroying at least 20 structures.
Smoke from the Yolo County fire was contributing to poor air quality in Napa, Sonoma, San Mateo and San Francisco counties, according to the National Weather Service.
The haze settling on areas to the south and west and rattled nerves near wine country communities that were devastated by deadly wildfires late last year.
"A lot of friends and family were texting today and saying they were having some PTSD," said Savannah Kirtlink, who evacuated her Napa home during the blazes in December. She took photos of the smoke moving in this weekend and told a Bay Area television station she empathized with her neighbors to the north who were forced to flee their homes.
"I'm imagining what they're going through," she said.
A dusting of ash fell as far away as San Francisco, where tourists snapped pictures of the Golden Gate Bridge enveloped in an orange shroud of fog and smoke.
Across the bridge in Marin County, some customers coughed as they stopped for gas at the Shell station in Sausalito, employee Sergio Garcia said.
"The sky is very dark, even in the middle of the day," he said. "It's a little scary."
Officials urged people not to call 911 about smoke unless they see actively burning fire.