Thousands Evacuated As Firefighters Battle Raging Lake County Blaze
LOWER LAKE (CBS/AP) -- A quick-moving wildfire burned dozens of structures, and forced the evacuation of thousands of residents in Lake County Sunday afternoon.
Flames raced through dry brush, destroying at least four homes and forcing more than 4,000 people to flee, and firefighters to carry animals out of a northern California lake community that was evacuated in a devastating wildfire last year.
Authorities ordered about 4,000 residents to leave their homes as the blaze surged east of the town of Lower Lake. The wildfire spread to more than 3,000 acres by Sunday evening, and crews faced hot weather and little cloud cover as they tried to get a handle on the flames burning largely out of control.
Lieutenant Doug Pittman with the Marin County Sheriff's Department told KPIX 5 Assignment Editor Brian Dinsmore the fire was worse than the Valley Fire, and that officials were worried about losing the town of Clearlake.
"The fire activity could change in a moment's notice right now," said Suzie Blankenship, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
PG&E said 1,800 customers were without power in the area after de-energizing power lines in the fire zone.
More evacuations were ordered Sunday afternoon in the Copsey Creek subdivision, northeast of Lower Lake, where the blaze jumped a containment line, setting several houses on fire and prompting firefighters and volunteers to evacuate horses, goats and other animals as homes burn around them.
Evacuation centers were set up for residents in the Highlands Senior Center, and an American Red Cross shelter was opened at the Twin Pine Casino. Grace Evangelical Free Church in Kelseyville also opened up for evacuees.
Houses burned on both sides of Highway 140 and propane tanks exploded, making a hissing noise and spewing balls of fire. Firefighters and volunteers rushed to carry two goats at a time out of the area, as tractors and utility poles burned and bumpers melted off cars.
More than 1,000 firefighters are battling the wildfire burning east of Highway 29 in Lake County, and many more are expected to join the fight throughout the day, according to Cal Fire.
The fire was throwing embers and spreading rapidly because of parched conditions brought on by the state's historic drought, officials said. Large, explosive fires have torn through dried-out or hard-to-reach areas across California this summer, including a stubborn blaze near the picturesque Big Sur coastline that has burned 113 square miles since late July and destroyed nearly 60 homes.
San Francisco's fire department and other Bay Area fire agencies sent reinforcements to Lake County to assist with the battle.
Californians braced for heat Sunday, with high temperatures expected to soar 10 degrees above normal in the southern part of the state. Some counties in far Northern California also were warned of gusty winds and increased fire danger, officials said.
In Lake County, the fire threatened the houses of an additional 3,000 people in Hidden Valley Lake, a subdivision south of the blaze. Residents of the area have been told to stay vigilant in case they need to evacuate, Blankenship said.
Danielle Colbeck, 36, saw the flames from her home Saturday and decided to get out. She told the Press Democrat newspaper in Santa Rosa (http://bit.ly/2buWHAj ) that she loaded her car with her two cats and important papers and headed to a friend's house.
"When you see black smoke and flame from your driveway, you don't want to take a chance," said Colbeck, who lost her rental home and all of her belongings in the massive fire that evacuated Lower Lake last year.
That blaze killed four people and destroyed more than 1,300 homes. It was considered California's third-most-destructive wildfire after ravaging most of rural Lake County and parts of Napa County about 90 miles north of San Francisco. A report issued this week concluded that faulty wiring in a hot tub ignited the 120-square-mile fire.
Another blaze that broke out Saturday afternoon forced the evacuation of 135 homes south of Lake Nacimiento in central California, the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's office said. It burned more than 2 square miles, but no homes have been lost, and it's partially contained.
In Southern California, residents were readying for a heat wave and gusty winds. Temperatures were expected to reach triple digits, stoking an increased risk of wildfires across the mountains of Ventura and Los Angeles counties through at least Wednesday, the National Weather Service said.
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