The largest of California's 23 wildfires was burning its way
toward their homes, and about all they could do was sit on lawn chairs from a
distance and watch.
Dozens gathered
at a Moose lodge's parking lot in Northern California's Clearlake Oaks
community northwest of Sacramento, just a small fraction of the more than
13,000 people who'd been told to evacuate as the Rocky Fire approached.
The lot was an
impromptu campground; some stayed in recreational vehicles and others huddled
near their cars.
A woman cried as
she sat in a folding chair, looking at the smoke rising from hills on the
horizon.
"My heart's
broken. Just broken," the woman told CNN
affiliate KOVR on Monday, withholding her name. "Lived here 13
years and I've loved it, but I don't think I can go through this again,"
she said.
The nearly two dozen California wildfires have torched more than
134,000 acres as of Tuesday morning, according to state fire officials.
But the Rocky
Fire accounts for almost half of that, having consumed 65,000 acres, according
to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire.
The flames are
feeding on drought-parched vegetation that hasn't seen fire in many years, Cal
Fire says.
"This has
been a very fast-moving wildfire, with the dry conditions and the weather not
really cooperating with us over the past week," Cal Fire spokesman Daniel
Berlant told CNN affiliate KCRA.
The fire, which
began July 29 and is in Lake, Yolo and Colusa counties, was 12% contained and
had destroyed 50 buildings, including 24 homes, the agency said.
More than 2,900 firefighters, 285 engines, four air tankers and
19 helicopters are involved in that fight, Cal Fire says.
Compared with
the state's top 20 deadliest fires, which have burned 100,000 acres or more of
land, "this fire does not compare," spokesman Berlant told CNN.
But the fire is
unique because of the rate it has burned. It chewed through 20,000 acres in
about five hours, he said.
Across the
state, nearly 10,000 firefighters are working on 21 fires, officials say.
Firefighter loses his own home
Cal Fire says most of the fires are more
than 60% contained. But damage has been substantial in some cases. Fires in
Southern California's San Bernardino County and Northern California's Alpine
County have affected nearly 50,000 acres.
At the Moose
lodge parking lot in Clearlake Oaks, evacuee Raymond Padilla told of how
authorities persuaded him to leave at 5 a.m. Monday.
He was hesitant at first.
"I was told
at least three times to get out. I didn't have a car, and my animals were stuck
in the house. And I didn't want to leave, so I stayed there," Padilla told CNN
affiliate KTXL. "And then I was told for the last time that I'm
going to be arrested if I didn't leave, so I had to leave."
Even those
tasked with fighting the flames suffered losses. Volunteer firefighter Jeff
Brusatori was battling the Fork Complex fires -- a set of numerous wildfires in
Northern California east of Eureka -- when he learned that the flames were
headed toward his neighborhood late last week.
He tried to call
his wife to warn her, but couldn't get through, he told CNN
affiliate KRCR.
"All the
cell phones were down ... no calls were going through," Brusatori told
KRCR on Monday. "I was able to get a hold of one of my guys on radio that
was up here that started evacuating people. I told him go by my house and go
tell my wife, get the cats, get the dogs and what you can and get out."
Brusatori's wife got out about five minutes before the flames
overtook the home, KRCR reported.
The couple lost
everything that was in the home. He said he'll continue to battle the fire.
"Just
trying to deal with these fires first. We'll deal with (the lost home)
later," he said.
Other fires
include the Frog Fire, which has burned about 4,200 acres since Thursday. Lower temperatures,
higher humidity and clouds helped firefighters push containment to 20%, according
to the national fire tracking website InciWeb. The Lake Fire in San Bernardino
County burned more than 31,000 acres before it was contained.
Authorities also reported strides in fighting two other fires:
the Willow Fire northeast of North Fork in the Sierra National Forest and the
Cabin Fire east of Porterville in the Sequoia National Forest.
The 5,700-acre
Willow Fire was 70% contained Monday, and an evacuation order for some
residents was being lifted.
In the Sequoia
National Forest, firefighters reported that rain had helped them establish fire
lines against expected growth of the Cabin Fire, which has burned 2,600 acres
since mid-July.
Neither the
Willow nor the Cabin fires has destroyed any structures, but six people have
been injured in the Willow Fire.
California's record-setting drought has "turned much of the state
into a tinderbox," Gov. Jerry Brown said.
Temperatures in
Sacramento and other areas of Northern California, where many of the fires are
burning, have topped 100 degrees recently.
Lightning has helped fuel the flames. There have been thousands
of lightning strikes over the past several days, igniting hundreds of small
wildfires in the northern part of the state.
And the
accompanying thunderstorms have produced little or no rain, Berlant said.
Brown declared a
state of emergency Friday, mobilizing the National Guard to support the
disaster response.
Firefighter
killed
The U.S. Forest Service said David Ruhl, a father of two from
Rapid City, South Dakota, died fighting the Frog Fire in Northern California's
Modoc National Forest near Adin.
Rescuers found
Ruhl's body Friday morning, the Forest Service said. His death remains under
investigation.
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