Air crews make dent in massive Calif. wildfire
Topics: From the Wires, News
A helicopter drops fire retardant on the Ponderosa Fire deep in Battle Creek Canyon on Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012 west of Mineral, Calif. The Ponderosa Fire is 57 percent contained, with full containment expected early next week. (AP Photo/Jeff Barnard)(Credit: AP)MINERAL, Calif. (AP) — Air tankers and helicopters flew repeatedly into a deep rim rock canyon to douse the spearhead of a massive wildfire in Northern California and stop it from driving into a nearby mountain community and Lassen Volcanic National Park.
“This is the critical spot we have on the fire now,” CalFire Division Chief Scott Lindgren said Thursday as he watched the air drops of fire retardant and water on flames burning the steep timbered sides of the canyon, about 6 miles west of Mineral.
He was standing in a backyard on the edge of a cliff, where the brush and dirt were colored orange-pink by a recent drop of retardant.
“The further east we go, the harder it is to stop this thing,” he said. “The problem is, we catch it up on top (of the basalt rim rock) at night, but we can’t catch it on the bottom (of the canyon) because of the cliff.”
It has helped to slow the fire’s spread so far, reducing the threat to miles of commercial timberland, the mountain community of Mineral, and the park. A logging road to the east was cleared to serve as a contingency line if the air attacks don’t stop the fire from running up the canyon.
Sixty-four homes and 20 other buildings have been destroyed, mostly in the Manton area, since lightning ignited the blaze Saturday, state fire spokesman Don Camp said. It was threatening 900 other homes as it burned a new front to the south.
About 2,500 firefighters were at the blaze, which has grown to 44 square miles in the piney hills about 25 miles southeast of Redding.
Watching the drops with the fire chief were Jane Carney, Kelly Strong and Sherill Jenkins, who said they were ready to leave their vacation home if necessary.
“We’ll get out if we’re told to get out,” Strong said.
They stayed because, Jenkins said, “It’s beautiful up here.”
Mineral is a town of 187 vacation and year-round homes that serves as the gateway to the national park.
Beth Glenn, whose family owns area commercial buildings dating to 1896 said she was not nervous, having grown up in a firefighting family and living with the frequent fires in Southern California.
Elsewhere in the state, a large wildfire in Plumas National Forest expanded with help from gusty winds. The blaze, about 120 miles north of Sacramento, has consumed 99 square miles since it started at the end of July and threatens about 900 homes.




Comments
0 Comments