At least 6 people killed in Northern California wildfires - Action News
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At least 6 people killed in Northern California wildfires

Sky-darkening wildfires that took at least six lives and forced tens of thousands of people from their homes blazed throughout California on Friday as firefighting resources strained under the vastness of the infernos authorities were trying to control.

Fires have destroyed 175 structures, including homes, and threaten tens of thousands more

Deadly wildfires in Sonoma, Calif. vault perilously close to homes

4 years ago
Duration 0:40
Some residents in Northern California are desperately trying to save their homes, even as intense, uncontrolled fires rage through the area.

Sky-darkening wildfires that took at least six lives and forced tens of thousands of people from their homes blazed throughout California on Friday as firefighting resources strained under the vastness of the infernos authorities were trying to control.

Three major complexes encompassing dozens of fires chewed through a combined 1,994 square kilometres of forests, canyons and rural areas north, east and south of San Francisco Bay. Thousands of acres were ablaze elsewhere in the state.

Tens of thousands of homes were threatened by flames that drove through dense and bone-dry trees and brush. Many of the fires were sparked by lightning strikes from brief thunderstorms this week as a high-pressure area over the West brought a dangerous mix of triple-digit weather and monsoonal moisture pulled from the south.

Some fires doubled in size within 24 hours, fire officials said.

And while some evacuation orders were lifted in the small city of Vacaville, between San Francisco and Sacramento, other areas had theirs expanded. The University of California-Santa Cruz was evacuated and a new fire burning near Yosemite National Park also prompted evacuations.

Santa Cruz itself, a coastal city of 65,000, wasn't affected, but Mayor Justin Cummings urged residents Thursday evening to be prepared to evacuate by gassing up their vehicles and packing important documents, medicines and other belongings.

"Prepare early so that you are ready to go at a moment's notice," Cummings said.

Although temperatures were predicted to ease slightly on Friday, they were also expected to be hot enough that firefighters will not be able to count on cool evening weather aiding them. Erratic winds also could drive the fires unpredictably in multiple directions, state fire officials said.

"There's so much heat in these fires that they create their own wind ... and they may blow in any direction, and very erratically," said Daniel Berlant, an assistant deputy director with the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

Winds gusting upto 32 kilometres per hour over ridge tops could challenge overnight firefighting efforts in Santa Cruz and San Mateo counties, said the incident commander, Cal Fire assistant chief Billy See.

Scorched homes and vehicles fill Spanish Flat Mobile Villa after wildfires swept through Napa County, Calif., on Thursday. The fire destroyed dozens of homes at the mobile home park. (Noah Berger/The Associated Press)

"This country likes to burn at night, more so than during the day, and that's because of the wind patterns," he said.

More than 64,000 people were ordered evacuated in those counties.

At least 2 missing

The ferocity of the fires was astonishing so early in the fire season, which historically has seen the largest and deadliest blazes when gusty, dry winds blow in the fall.

But the death toll already had reached at least six since the majority of blazes started less than a week ago, with four deaths claimed by fires burning in wine country north of San Francisco.

The bodies of three people were found in a home that burned in Napa, Henry Wofford, spokesman for the Napa County Sheriff's Office, told the San Francisco Chronicle. In Solano County, Sheriff Thomas A. Ferrara reported the death of a male resident there.

Separately, a Pacific Gas & Electric utility worker was found dead Wednesday in a vehicle in the Vacaville area. In central California, a pilot on a water-dropping mission in western Fresno County died Wednesday morning when his helicopter crashed.

Thomas Henney, right, and Charles Chavira watch a plume of smoke spread over the city of Healdsburg, as wildfires burn in Northern California. Gov. Gavin Newsom said the wildfires are clear evidence of climate change. (Noah Berger/The Associated Press)

At least two other people were missing and more than 30 civilians and firefighters have been injured, authorities said.

Smoke and ash billowing from the fires also fouled the air throughout California's scenic central coast and in San Francisco.

Homes destroyed

The fires have destroyed at least 175 buildings, including homes, and threatened tens of thousands more.

Tim and Anne Roberts had gone to the beach with their two children on Monday to avoid the smoke at their home in Boulder Creek in Santa Cruz County. They packed a change of clothes, their children's school supplies and their passports just in case.

They learned Wednesday that their house had burned. Birth certificates, legal documentsand family heirlooms are gone. But in photos of the ruins, they were surprised by how many redwoods, oaks and fruit trees were still standing.

"It's a strange sort of comfort," Tim Roberts said.

More than 10,000 firefighters were on the front lines. Some 3,000 firefighters had arrived in the past 24 hours, along with hundreds of fire engines from neighbouring states, and National Guard troops that were staffing hand crews and flying helicopters, Berlant said.

Some C-130 military aircraft also had been outfitted as air tankers, Berlant said.

More firefighters were sent to battle thefires in Santa Cruz and San Mateo counties but "it's still not enough," See said.

"We're still drastically short for a fire of this size," he said.

Cal Fire spokespersonDan Olson said there are concerns that some people are trying to organize through social media to create volunteer brigades and fight the fire themselves.